It's been a busy and exciting summer for us at SayoStudio, and we're excited to present a small preview of a new mural installation we created for Gentian Creek Preserve!

How many species do you see?
🎨 Art by , , and Ari Gea, SayoStudio.

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It's time... coming in hot with this month's journal cover!

SayoStudio's Claire Agosti created this piece for their July issue; depicting colorectal cancer signaling pathways and therapies.

Read the journal here: https://t.co/EkyJ2eGD6q

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Breaking news in

The drug dostarlimab put patients in remission without the need for radiation and chemotherapy. We can't wait to see what comes next.

Artwork here showing a primary tumor within the colon metastasizing by Nicolle R. Fuller, SayoStudio.

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This June, we're diving into the world of

The human GI tract is full of bacteria! Contrary to what one might think, these microbes are beneficial and help us digest food. Otherwise, many nutrients would be indigestible.

Art by Nicolle R. Fuller, SayoStudio.

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Continuing our here at SayoStudio, we're going all the way back to the first stars in our universe!🌌 🌟

Researchers know that the first stars (or those that formed after the didn't look all that dissimilar to stars we see today.

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We're kicking off March with a and our first ever monthly theme! Introducing SayoStudio's

Throughout March, we'll be sharing a lot of Sci-art depicting blackholes, stars, and gravity waves 🤩 🌌

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This was done for 's Cancer Discovery. This paper documents how low-dose radiation can help reverse tumor immune desertification, making immunotherapy a highly effective treatment option where it was previously resistant.

Art by Claire Agosti, SayoStudio.

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After seeing the launch, we couldn't help but be excited for what it will find!

Here's a look at what our first massive blue stars were like. Embedded in gaseous filaments, with cosmic microwave background just visible at the edges. Art by Nicolle Fuller, SayoStudio

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Sharing more abstract science created for Cancer Discovery , accompanying an article by By Claire Agosti for

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This epic of the universe’s first massive, is available here (https://t.co/jghmXwBYUn) for FREE when you sign up for the SayoStudio newsletter!

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This illustration of Planococcus halocryophilus bacteria—dweller of Arctic permafrost—is the 3rd in our extremophiles series. Astrobiologists study P. halo to understand how life could survive in super-low temps on Mars. Art by Nicolle R. Fuller of SayoStudio.

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