As debate continues to swirl around arsenic-loving bacteria, a space rock yields new astrobiological clues
As debate continues to swirl around arsenic-loving bacteria, a space rock yields new astrobiological clues
Paul Riley of University College London discusses his new research, published June 8th in Nature.
A chemical found in the fruit built muscle while reducing fat
Upon activation, a novel population of resident cardiac cells forms new muscle after damage
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in vaccination and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
New compounds are showing promise in targeting subpopulations of cancer stem cells
Two studies point to contamination of patient samples as the cause of a controversial 2009 finding that linked the mouse virus XMRV with chronic fatigue syndrome
Researchers discover a protein that may allow already-differentiated somatic cells to become stem cells
Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, Stanford University. Age: 41