Grants, Prizes and Donations

Magnus Ingelman-Sundberg awarded ERC Proof of Concept Grant
Professor Magnus Ingelman-Sundberg has been awarded an ERC Proof of Concept Grant, which is aimed at researchers who have previously been funded by the European Research Council and now want to explore the innovation potential of their previous project.

Three KI researchers awarded ERC Advanced Grants
Three professors at Karolinska Institutet – Gonçalo Castelo-Branco, Maria Eriksson and Björn Högberg – have been awarded ERC Advanced Grants, one of the most prestigious and competitive EU funding schemes. The funds, totaling more than 8 million euros, will support the use of innovative basic research methods to further our understanding of disease mechanisms and to explore the tiniest building blocks of DNA.

Swedish Cancer Society grants SEK 54.9 million to KI researchers
Thirteen researchers at Karolinska Institutet have been awarded 54.9 million Swedish kronor from the Swedish Cancer Society. The foundation is distributing a total of SEK 124.3 million to 31 cancer researchers in Sweden.

Millions to KI researchers for kidney research
Eighteen kidney researchers at Karolinska Institutet have been allocated grants totaling 3.2 million Swedish kronor from the Swedish Kidney Foundation, an announcement made in connection with World Kidney Day on March 9.
The Conversation

Lower risk of heart disease when obesity is due to genetics rather than lifestyle
KI researchers write in The Conversation that their results on the link between obesity and cardiovasular disease provide further evidence that the effects of obesity on health differ from one person to the next and that focusing too much on BMI has its drawbacks.

Melatonin use may reduce self-harm in young people
Treating sleep problems with melatonin could lead to fewer instances of self-harm in young people, writes KI researcher Sarah Bergen in an article in The Conversation based on her own research.

Air pollution linked to higher risk of long COVID in young adults
Young adults who lived in highly polluted areas were more likely to suffer from long COVID compared to those living in areas with low levels of pollution, according to a new study by KI researchers published in the Lancet Regional Health – Europe and highlighted in The Conversation.

More articles from KI researchers published in The Conversation
From cold-resistant genes to face masks, Karolinska Institutet researchers contribute to the global public discourse on a range of topics through our collaboration with the international news site The Conversation.
The Conversation
The Macchiarini case: timeline
KI in the media (Swedish only)
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Selected top publications
New recommendations for how researchers should use placebo-like control treatments
Karin Jensen et al, BMJ, May 2023
Subset of immune cells in the brain is involved in the establishment of a neuronal system controlling cognition
Bertrand Joseph et al, Nature Neuroscience, May 2023
Study opens for new ways to study protein droplets in disease
Michael Landreh et al, Journal of the American Chemical Society, maj 2023
Delay of certain T cell responses may underlie severe COVID-19
Anna Smed-Sörensen et al, Nature Communications, April 2023
Bacteria stuck in the cervix may cause recurrent infections
Gabriella Edfeldt et al, Microbiome, March 2023
Researchers propose a novel biomarker for early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease
Igor C. Fontana, Amit Kumar, Agneta Nordberg, Nature Reviews Neurology, March 2023
New method identifies protein forms involved in disease and drug response
Nils Kurzawa et al, Nature Chemical Biology, March 2023
Researchers have mapped the human adipose tissue: This is how fat cells change in health and disease
Lucas Massier et al, Nature Communications, March 2023
Less dangerous than previously thought to receive an artificial heart valve that is too small
Michael Dismorr et al, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, March 2023
Too much oxygen after cardiac arrest is associated with lower survival
Akil Awad et al, Critical Care, March 2023
Participation in a clinical trial linked to lower mortality in patients with heart failure
Lars H. Lund et al, European Heart Journal, March 2023
More high impact publications