Free radicals, widely believed to promote cancer, may actually slow tumor growth.
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
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.
A new study finds that more than two thirds of Americans approve of the use of stem cells in research aiming to cure serious diseases.
I the dark Arctic shallows one research finds heterotrophic marine bacteria doing a surprising amount of carbon fixing.
Exosomes are small membrane vesicles secreted by most cell types. Internal vesicles form by the inward budding of cellular compartments known as multivesicular endosomes (MVE). When MVE fuse with the plasma membrane, these internal vesicles are relea
July 1, 2011
Meet some of the people featured in the July 2011 issue of The Scientist.
“This is my trophy,” says biologist Michael Edidin, walking across his office at Johns Hopkins University to pick up two oversized clock hands, once part of the stately clock tower that still stands on the Baltimore campus. In his right-hand pocket i