A long-standing belief about HIV has quietly shaped how scientists think about the virus. For decades, researchers described ...
Cells aren’t as passive as scientists once thought—they actively create internal currents to move proteins quickly and ...
The same brain cells activate when you see something and when you imagine it, helping explain why mental images can feel so ...
The long-term neurologic symptoms such as "brain fog" experienced by some patients with COVID-19 may be caused by a unique pathology — the occlusion of brain capillaries by large megakaryocyte cells, ...
Today's nearly $70 billion U.S. biofuels economy is powered by two technology toolboxes. Biochemical technologies—used to produce around 17 billion gallons of ethanol annually—leverage microorganisms ...
A study published in Science Advances shares new insights into how two of the most common types of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells kill cancer. Investigators from Baylor College of Medicine, ...
Previous work has laid the foundation by establishing a role for the microbiome in cancer patients’ responses to some immunotherapy treatments. Part of this was the understanding that some bacteria ...
Researchers have found that a deeper look at proteins and cells may help explain why prostate cancer tumors often become resistant to hormone therapy. Researchers found that looking at cell patterns ...
In people with chronic heart failure, the heart doesn't pump blood as effectively as it should. This leaves the patient weak, tired, and short of breath. The disease is life-threatening, and around ...
Scientists at The University of Manchester have identified the method by which cells control the recycling of molecules, a process that is essential for them to move. The discovery provides ...