Aging taps us on the shoulder in many ways: wrinkles, thinning hair, loss of flexibility, slowing of the brain. But the ...
Researchers have captured the dynamic nature of nuclear pore complexes with AFM, reshaping our understanding of intracellular ...
There is a huge amount of DNA in most human cells, and that DNA has to be carefully compacted and organized so that it will ...
At the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research in Basel, Switzerland, mouse geneticist Antoine Peters and his team investigate how ...
Chrononutrition research indicates that eating later in the evening or at night, when circadian physiology is less favorable ...
Membraneless organelles, also called biomolecular condensates, are changing how scientists think about protein chemistry, various diseases and even the origin of life.
AI therapeutics company built on causal biology, today announced the publication of research in Nature Communications validating its POSH (Pooled Optical Screening in Human cells) platform. The study ...
The cells of all animals—including humans—are characterized by their ability to adhere particularly well to surfaces in their ...
The study reveals how Balanophora plants function despite abandoning photosynthesis and, in some species, sexual reproduction ...
A Northwestern Medicine study has shed light on a critical molecular mechanism underlying amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) ...
News Medical on MSN
Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm
"It's been known for decades that cancer can flatten healthy day-night stress hormone rhythms,” says CSHL’s Jeremy Borniger. ...
Opinion
The Grand Egyptian Museum and the Transformations of the Sacred in the Collective Imagination
The celebration marking the opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum was not a fleeting cultural event, but a collective ritual that reconfigured the relationship between Egyptians and their symbolic ...
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