Drosophila insulin-like peptides (dILPs) regulate part of the signaling pathway that helps keep organs growing in proportion during development.
Drosophila insulin-like peptides (dILPs) regulate part of the signaling pathway that helps keep organs growing in proportion during development.
| March 1, 2013
Meet some of the people featured in the March 2013 issue of The Scientist.
Things break in the lab. Here’s how to protect your equipment, and what to do when it stops working.
Scotch tape and a scalpel provide a MacGyver-esque approach to microfabrication.
During development, communication between organs determines their relative final size.
A new faster-switching, longer-lasting GFP allows gentler and faster high resolution microscopy on living cells.
Live-cell imaging forces cells to perform in an unnatural environment, but with the right chamber, you can keep them warm and comfortable.
As X-ray crystallography enters its second century, shrinking crystals and brighter light sources are redefining structural biology.
Collective cell migration relies on a directional signal that comes from the moving cluster, rather than from external cues.