About 1 million people in the U.S. live with multiple sclerosis, a chronic autoimmune disease that inflames the nervous ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
'Young' Immune Cells Partly Reverse Alzheimer's Symptoms in Mice
Specially engineered 'young' immune cells could help to reverse the effects of aging and the damage to brain cells caused by ...
The progression of Alzheimer's disease is poorly understood, but new research may have found how the plaques that cause it ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Study reveals structural and cellular clues behind cancer-linked GnT-V enzyme selectivity
Glycans are important complex carbohydrates found on cell surfaces that serve crucial roles in cell-to-cell communication, structure, and protection.
Martin Kampmann’s work, supported by the National Institutes of Science (NIH), maps cellular “decision points” that determine ...
News Medical on MSN
Unraveling cancer’s neural connections: NIH-funded study investigates how stem cell regulation influences tissue renewal and cancer development
The same cellular renewal that keeps our bodies healthy might also fuel the growth of cancer. A UC Merced biologist has found that the brain could hold the key to stopping it.
As chronic liver disease becomes more widespread, researchers at Science Tokyo have developed a lab-grown organoid that ...
Hosted on MSN
Scientists discover immortal cells in lab
In a groundbreaking development, scientists have uncovered a type of immortal cell in laboratory settings, offering unprecedented potential for medical research and treatment. These cells, with their ...
Northwestern Medicine scientists have uncovered how a specific type of cell in the inner ear plays a commanding role in ...
Munich news, health insurance, technology, jobs and other topics for expatriates. The Eye Newspapers covers daily news and offers services for foreigners.
Plant a seed and, if the conditions are right, the seed grows. The process seems simple enough at first glance and is something many of us may feel like we learned in elementary school.
A protein involved with cell death can be manipulated to slow or reverse tumor growth, a pair of new studies in mice found.
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