Is the push for science to save the still flailing economy a threat to scientific research?
Is the push for science to save the still flailing economy a threat to scientific research?
A growth factor isolated from human stem cells shows promising results in a mouse model of multiple sclerosis.
Researchers design the first rewritable biological data storage system.
Ancient bacteria living in deep-sea sediments are alive—but with metabolisms so slow that it’s hard to tell.
Researchers identify the first circadian clock component conserved across all three domains of life.
Nanoparticles in mice can be switched on to activate insulin production using a radio signal.
Researchers identify two new DNA repair systems, in addition to four that were already known, that can attack unprotected telomeres.
Anxious mice are more likely to come down with aggressive skin cancer than those who show less stress on behavioral tests.
Telomeres are repetitive, noncoding sequences that cap the ends of linear chromosomes. They consist of hexameric nucleotide sequences (TTAGGG in humans) repeated hundreds to thousands of times. Telomeres protect the protein-coding sequences of DNA on