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New Step in Dietary Cholesterol Processing Opens Treatment Avenues
Researchers have described a previously unknown step in the complex process by which dietary cholesterol is processed in the intestines before being released into the bloodstream – potentially revealing a new pathway to target.
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Firefighter Study Reveals the Body's Response to Intense Physical Exercise
By studying training firefighters, researchers have revealed hundreds of molecular changes as our bodies respond to intense physical exercise.
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Newly-Discovered Bacterial Protein Keeps Human Cells Healthy
Researchers describes a hitherto unknown protein with anti-oxidizing properties secreted by Coxiella burnetii, a Gram-negative intracellular bacterium, pointing to possible treatments for auto-immune diseases and even cancer.
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Vitamin B5 Levels Influence Tumor Growth in Mouse Model of Breast Cancer
New research has discovered that breast cancer cells expressing the Myc gene rely heavily on vitamin B5 to grow and survive, which could potentially be exploited as a therapeutic avenue.
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Gut Microbiota Can Prevent or Create Inflammation of the Prostate Gland
Recent studies indicate that inflammation is one of the causes of the development of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Inflammation may result from past infections, but also from the state of functioning of the intestinal microbiota.
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Method Reveals Host–Microbe Interactions Without Cultivation
A new method has been developed that identifies individual bacteria and the metabolites present, revealing more insights into host–microbe interactions without cultivation.
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What Happens in a Virus Particle When the Temperature Is Raised?
Researchers at Lund University, together with colleagues at the NIST Synchrotron Facility in the USA, have mapped on an atomic level what happens in a virus particle when the temperature is raised.
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Scientists Slow the Progression of Deadly Huntington’s Disease
Huntington’s disease causes involuntary movements and dementia, has no cure, and is fatal. For the first time, UC Riverside scientists have shown they can slow its progression in flies and worms, opening the door to human treatments.
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Genetics From Healthy Tissue Could Be Potential Biomarker for Cancer Reoccurrence
Genetic information collected from seemingly healthy tissue near lung tumors may be a better predictor of whether cancer will come back after treatment than analysis of the tumors themselves.
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Cold Weather Affects Different Varieties of Kale in Different Ways
Researchers from Oldenburg and Bremen investigated the effect of environmental factors on genetically different varieties of kale.
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