Audiobook

Apr 8, 2026 | biology

About this episode

Deep inside the body of a developing bird lies a small, often overlooked organ that quietly orchestrates one of the most essential processes of life: the making of immune cells. This organ, known as the bursa of Fabricius, is not widely known outside scientific circles, yet it plays a central role in shaping how birds defend themselves against disease. Within its folds, an intricate story unfolds, one that blends biology, chemistry, and the remarkable choreography of migrating cells. More

Original article reference

This Audio is a summary of the paper ‘Tenascin-C regulates CXCR4+ B cell migration and cortex formation in the developing bursa of Fabricius’, in Frontiers in Immunology, https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1636140

Funding

Funding for this research was provided by Selye János Doctoral College for Advanced Studies – Semmelweis University, the Hungarian Science Foundation NKFI grant K-138664 and Emőke Szőcs was supported by the 2025-2.1.1-EKÖP-2025-00014 University Research Scholarship Programme of The Ministry for Culture and Innovation from the source of The National Research, Development and Innovation Fund.

Contact

For further information, you can connect with Ádám Soós at soos.adam@semmelweis.hu

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International LicenseCreative Commons License

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