MERLN office

MERLN — Institute for Technology-Inspired Regenerative Medicine

The MERLN Institute for Technology-Inspired Regenerative Medicine strives to maintain a leading position in the field of biomedical engineering by combining creative research with training a generation of interdisciplinary scientists. MERLN’s activities operate at the interface of biology, engineering and medicine to maximise impact at the level of public involvement and the commercialisation of research. MERLN’s vision is based on sharing knowledge, infrastructure, and ambition.

Scientific breakthrough: Forming model embryos from stem cells in the lab

New research to unravel embryonic development and discover medicines

Scientists from the MERLN Institute and the Hubrecht Institute (KNAW) have successfully created in the laboratory embryo-like structures from mouse stem cells. These model embryos resemble natural ones to the extent that, for the first time, they implant into the uterus and initiate pregnancy. This radically new method opens the door to understanding the first and hidden processes of life, problems of infertility, or the embryonic origin of diseases. This scientific breakthrough has been published in Nature. >> read the complete news article.

Stem cell

Research

Research at MERLN is focused on developing and employing breakthrough technologies to advance the repair and regeneration of both tissues and organs. The strategy includes, amongst others, the development of “smart” biomaterials that can trigger intrinsic tissue repair mechanisms mediated by the patient’s own cells.

Education

MERLN’s scientists are involved in educational activities within different undergraduate and graduate programmes as well as in the supervision of students performing research projects. They use their expertise in biology, chemistry, materials science and engineering, with distinct emphasis on biomedical applications, including regenerative medicine.

Most prestigious European grant to two UM scientists

  • UM news

Two Maastricht University professors are to receive the most prestigious European research grant for individua

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Seeing things you cannot see

  • Featured
  • Researchers

Berta Cillero Pastor is an Associate Professor and group leader at the MERLN Institute for Technology-Inspired Regener

Foto van Berta Cillero Pastor

Two Vici grants for Maastricht researchers

  • UM in the press
  • Researchers
  • Students

Two researchers from Maastricht University (UM) have each received a Vici grant of € 1.5 million from the Dutch Research Council (NWO).

Multi-million euro grant for the development of in vitro kidney models by MERLN

  • Researchers
  • Corporate
  • UM in the press

Multi-million euro grant for the development of in vitro kidney models by MERLN

UNS 40 MERLN

A Brightlands institute

Brightlands is an open innovation community in a global context, connecting four campuses in the province of Limburg: in Maastricht, Heerlen, Sittard-Geleen and Venlo. The campuses provide entrepreneurs, scientists and students state-of-the-art facilities to support development, education, innovation and growth. Naturally, there are close links between all four Brightlands campuses, and together they enable Limburg to serve as an innovation region where researchers and entrepreneurs take on the major challenges in the areas of materials, health, food and smart services.

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MERLN Institute for Technology-Inspired Regenerative Medicine &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="https://merlninstitute.com/contact" target="_blank">Contact details</a></br></br> Universiteitssingel 40
6229 ER Maastricht
C3.577
NUTRIM building