An approved cancer therapeutic makes hiding HIV susceptible to antiviral therapy.
An approved cancer therapeutic makes hiding HIV susceptible to antiviral therapy.
Weakened viruses used in vaccines can swap genes and produce disease-causing strains.
Present in every tissue of the body, ubiquitin appears to be involved in a dizzying array of functions, from cell cycle and division to organelle and ribosome biogenesis, as well as the response to viral infection. The protein plays at least two role
Sampling for potentially pandemic strains of influenza virus at hog farms is lax compared with poultry farms, worrying some experts.
The second of the two controversial bird flu papers is published in Science, revealing that just five mutations can render the virus transmissible between ferrets.
Researchers find a slew of new fungal species inhabiting the human gut, and suggest a link to an inflammatory bowel disease.
Researchers in Vienna are starting a Phase I trial on the first ever vaccine with a potential to treat the neurodegenerative disease.
How plants pass defenses to offspring through a complex molecular network
New PCR assay can detect more than 40 strains of H5N1 in a single go.
Why naked mole-rats and experimental gene therapies remind me of groundbreaking artists.