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Why So Soon?

Researchers are using modern experimental tools to probe the mysterious molecular pathways that lead to premature labor and birth.

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Big-Bird Brain

Children watching clips of Sesame Street inside fMRI scanners yield unprecedented insights into the functioning of their brains.

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Down for the Count

One, two, three, four . . . . Counting colonies and plaques can be tedious, but tools exist to streamline the process.

The 2013 Salary Survey Is Here

Enter to win a $100 Amazon gift card while helping us compile the must up-to-date salary data in the life sciences.

News & Opinion

Covering the life sciences inside and out

The essential nutrient can kill drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis by producing oxidative radicals that damage DNA.

image: Protective Phages

Protective Phages

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Viruses that attack bacteria may be an important component of our gut microbiota.

image: Cell-Based Computing Goes Analog

Cell-Based Computing Goes Analog

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Synthetic biologists are looking to analog, not digital, circuits to create cell-based calculators that can add, divide, and even perform algorithms.

image: Nano-vehicles for Cancer Drugs

Nano-vehicles for Cancer Drugs

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Experimental cancer therapeutics delivered to tumors via nanoparticles could provide a safer and more effective therapy than conventional chemotherapy.

The Nutshell

Daily News Roundup

From now on, US physicians and researchers will have to get approval from the FDA before they can perform a stool transplant.

A US government advisor warned officials of the dangers of antibiotic-resistant anthrax while profiting from antitoxin sales.

Chilly weather could impede the immune reactions that most effectively contain viruses like the common cold.  

A psychiatrist argues that the newly revised manual of mental disorders is part of a dangerous trend toward the medicalization of normal behavior.

Current Issue

May 2013

Discoveries of microbial communities that transfer electrons between cells and across relatively long distances are launching a new field of microbiology.

The study of connective tissue is shedding light on pain and providing new explanations for alternative medicine.

Researchers are using modern experimental tools to probe the mysterious molecular pathways that lead to premature labor and birth.

Multimedia

Video, Slideshows, Infographics

Desulfobulbaceae bacteria were recently discovered to form centimeter-long cables, containing thousands of cells that share an outer membrane.

USC researcher Mohamed El-Naggar demonstrates how some bacteria grow electrical wires that allow them to link up in big biological circuits.

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Featured Comment

Welcome to the omni-surveillance future!  This is just the beginning. Deal with it. It's not going away.


- BPH, "Anonymous" Genomes Identified
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