Trending News
News
News
Obesity Linked to Burning Less Energy During Daytime
A new study has shown that body weight significantly impacts the timing and manner in which the human body burns energy. This research could offer new insights into understanding and managing obesity.
News
Vitamin B12 Boosts Cell Reprogramming Efficiency
Researchers at IRB Barcelona discover that vitamin B12 significantly boosts the efficiency of cellular reprogramming, thus holding promise for regenerative medicine.
News
Molecular Glue Degraders Could Target “Undruggable” Proteins
Cells contain molecular machinery that targets and disposes of unwanted proteins. Scientists would like to hijack this process to control proteins involved in cancer and other diseases, using a type of molecule called a molecular glue degrader.
News
Genomic "Tug of War" Could Influence How Cancer Patients Respond to Decitabine
A genomic tug of war for a gene activator could explain why some cancers respond to decitabine and others don't respond or become resistant over time.
News
IBD Risk Varies for People of European and African Ancestry
Researchers have questioned whether rare variants associated with IBD, found in people with European ancestry, confer the same risk in African Americans.
News
Daily Scheduled Exercise Helps To Sync Body Clock
Physical activities in the morning, associated with daily patterns of sleep/wake cycle, convey timing information from the light-sensitive central clock in the brain to the weight-bearing skeletal tissues.
News
Air Pollution May Be Interfering With Prenatal Hormone Activity
Researchers from Rutgers University have uncovered the potential impact of exposure to air pollution on prenatal hormone health and infant reproductive development.
News
Tau Proteins Visualized While Neurons Are “Talking”
For the first time, University of Queensland (UQ) researchers have shown how the tau protein, known for its role in dementias, behaves where communication in the brain takes place.
News
Contents of Human Bone Marrow Mapped
A team of researchers has mapped the location and spatial features of blood-forming cells within human bone marrow, providing a powerful way to study diseases like sickle cell anaemia and leukemia.
News
Drug-Like Molecule Extends Lifespan and Ameliorates Pathology in Worms
Researchers at the Buck Institute have identified a new drug-like molecule that keeps mitochondria healthy via mitophagy, a process that removes and recycles damaged mitochondria in multicellular organisms.
Advertisement