Meet the species whose DNA has recently been sequenced.
The neural nexus of the circadian clock shows signs of functional decline as mice age, providing clues as to why sleep patterns tend to change as people grow older.
A Danish cell bank scrambles to save irreplaceable cell and tissue samples in the wake of a flood.
New evidence supports an old idea that embryos with genetic abnormalities can somehow fix themselves early in development.
Ivan Martin talks about the promise of using cell-based therapies to regenerate joint cartilage.
Free radicals, widely believed to promote cancer, may actually slow tumor growth.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in cancer biology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
Three RNAs expressed in the nucleolus mediate death in cells exposed to too much fat.
A certain type of neural precursor does it all—replaces itself, differentiates into specialized brain cells, and multiplies into more stem-cell-like cells.
These small membrane vesicles do much more than clean up a cell’s trash—they also carry signals to distant parts of the body, where they can impact multiple dimensions of cellular life.