A roundup of recent research announced this week at the annual conference of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR).
Covering the life sciences inside and out
A roundup of recent research announced this week at the annual conference of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR).
Fly circadian behavior is dramatically different in natural environments than in the lab.
Vaccination via tiny microneedles elicits a powerful immune response in the skin.
Knocking electrons out of atomic orbit with a laser allows researchers to take femtosecond-scale “movies” of molecules in motion.
Adult human ovaries contain a population of stem cells capable of generating immature egg cells.
Despite suggestions to the contrary, the Y chromosome is not necessarily rotting away.
Often thought to be artifacts of the lab, prions in yeast may actually drive the evolution of beneficial traits.
Researchers develop a tiny device that motors around the stomach, fueled by its acidic environment.
Two steps help Drosophila melanogaster larvae survive freezing conditions.
A new device can detect sounds a million times fainter than the hearing threshold of the human ear.