2009
- Tracking deadly viruses' spread from animals to humans
January 16, 2009
Pandemics can be prevented before they're spread globally, says Dr. Nathan Wolfe.
- Novel technique changes lymph node biopsy, reduces radiation exposure in breast cancer patients
January 13, 2009
Information obtained from a new application of photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is worth its weight in gold to breast cancer patients.
- Wireless Microgrippers Grab Living Cells in 'Biopsy' Tests
January 12, 2009
Johns Hopkins researchers have invented dust-particle-size devices that can be used to grab and remove living cells from hard-to-reach places without the need for electrical wires, tubes or batteries.
- Synthetic HDL: A new weapon to fight cholesterol problems
January 9, 2009
Buttery Christmas cookies, eggnog, juicy beef roast, rich gravy and creamy New York-style cheesecake. Happy holiday food unfortunately can send blood cholesterol levels sky high.
2008
- Science’s Breakthrough of the Year: Reprogramming Cells
December 19, 2008
By inserting genes that turn back a cell's developmental clock, researchers are gaining insights into disease and the biology of how a cell decides its fate.
- Cells’ Protein-Folding ‘ER’ May Play a Role in Type 2 Diabetes
November 24, 2008
“It used to be that for a long time, we thought that type 2 diabetes was just your insulin not working – insulin resistance,” says Feroz Papa, MD, PhD.
- Biomedical Engineers’ Detective Work Reveals Antibiotic Mechanism
November 14, 2008
A series of genetic clues led a team of BU biomedical engineers to uncover exactly how certain antibiotics kill bacteria.
- Nature study demonstrates that bacterial clotting depends on clustering
November 3, 2008
Bacteria shown to cause blood clots.
- Random Event Triggers Cellular Switch
October 20, 2008
A stochastic single-molecule event is enough to switch a bacterial cell from one phenotype to another.
- New prenatal test for Down syndrome less risky than amniocentesis, Stanford/Packard scientists say
October 8, 2008
Pregnant women worried about their babies’ genetic health face a tough decision: get prenatal gene testing and risk miscarriage, or skip the tests and miss the chance to learn of genetic defects before birth.
- Important new step toward producing stem cells for human treatment
September 25, 2008
Harvard researchers produce iPS cells without use of retroviruses.
- New Protein Structure Could Spur Research on Metabolism, Cell Death
September 4, 2008
Researchers have determined the structure of a human membrane protein involved in metabolism and the self-destruction of cells.
- Infections linked to premature births more common than thought, Stanford study finds
August 25, 2008
Previously unrecognized and unidentified infections of amniotic fluid may be a significant cause of premature birth, according to researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
- Amplifying Small Molecules
August 14, 2008
Supramolecular complex generates target compounds in PCR-like cascade reaction.
- Daley and colleagues create 20 disease-specific stem cell lines
August 7, 2008
Lines to be part of new HSCI iPS collection available to researchers.
- Scientists discover the travel patterns of seasonal flu
April 16, 2008
Scientists discover the travel patterns of seasonal flu – findings may lead to improved flu vaccines.
- Scientists Identify New Leads for Treating Parasitic Worm Disease
March 16, 2008
Compounds May Provide Much-Needed New Weapons In Worldwide Battle Against Schistosomiasis.
- Bird brains suggest how vocal learning evolved
March 11, 2008
Though they perch far apart on the avian family tree, birds with the ability to learn songs use similar brain structures to sing their tunes.
- Regulator of microRNAs is key to cell reprogramming and carcinogenesis
February 21, 2008
MicroRNAs are a recently discovered class of RNAs that encode no proteins but instead regulate gene activity.
- DNA is blueprint, contractor and construction worker for new structures
January 31, 2008
DNA is the blueprint of all life, giving instruction and function to organisms ranging from simple one-celled bacteria to complex human beings.
- Team IDs weakness in anthrax bacteria
January 22, 2008
MIT and New York University researchers have identified a weakness in the defenses of the anthrax bacterium that could be exploited to produce new antibiotics.
- Study: Brain connections strengthen during waking hours, weaken during sleep
January 20, 2008
Most people know it from experience: After so many hours of being awake, your brain feels unable to absorb any more—and several hours of sleep will refresh it.
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