John B. Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka jointly take home this year’s Nobel Prize in Medicine for turning back the developmental clock.
Daily News Roundup
John B. Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka jointly take home this year’s Nobel Prize in Medicine for turning back the developmental clock.
Researchers find that a deadly bacterial disease hitchhikes in people infected with the virus that causes AIDS to spread throughout sub-Saharan Africa.
A new rhabdovirus may be responsible for an outbreak of fatal hemorrhagic fever.
The microbiome of the lung is different in patients with the disease, which causes a thick buildup of mucus that makes breathing difficult.
A new study reveals clues to the naked mole-rat’s ability to thrive in underground environments with high levels of carbon dioxide.
A seventh patient succumbs to a deadly, drug-resistant superbug terrorizing the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center.
The US Department of Agriculture announces a partnership of 10 study sites to help promote long-term research.
Researchers are given a prize for high-impact science that began with an unusual or seemingly frivolous study.
Giving researchers access to the health records of 52 million people in England could prove invaluable to biomedical scientists.
A cheap pain reliever that can kill drug-resistant, tuberculosis-causing bacteria may never be tested.