ADVERTISEMENT

404

Not Found

Is this what you were looking for?

tag cancer research butterfly brain cancer marine life

Capsule Reviews
Bob Grant | Apr 1, 2014 | 3 min read
Cancer Virus, A Window on Eternity, Murderous Minds, and The Extreme Life of the Sea
Those We Lost in 2018
Ashley Yeager | Dec 26, 2018 | 10+ min read
The scientific community said goodbye to a number of leading researchers this year.
Mapping Brain Proteins
Devika G. Bansal | Feb 1, 2018 | 7 min read
Researchers are using souped-up mass spectrometry to localize proteins within brain cells.
Week in Review: November 2–6
Jef Akst | Nov 6, 2015 | 3 min read
How Ebola hides from immune cells; gut microbes’ role in immunotherapy response; new mechanisms of hearing loss; butterflies use milkweed toxins to ward off predators
My Mighty Mouse
Megan Scudellari | Apr 1, 2015 | 10+ min read
Personal drug regimens based on xenograft mice harboring a single patient’s tumor still need to prove their true utility in medicine.
The Current Status of Cancer Treatment
Tom Hollon | Sep 21, 2003 | 8 min read
Until the advent of targeted therapies, dealing with cancer, outside of surgery, was not unlike waging guerrilla warfare on an enemy of unknown size: destroying the whole village was one fear, not knowing how many soldiers lurked in the surrounding hillsides, another. But new monoclonal antibodies and small molecule drugs are designed to concentrate cytotoxicity where needed and reduce damage elsewhere in the body--unlike the one-poison-kills-all-tumors approach that is chemotherapy. Their d
Week in Review: April 24–28
Tracy Vence | Apr 28, 2017 | 2 min read
Where Zika virus persists in monkeys; more-advanced mini brains; artificial womb supports fetal lambs for weeks; cancer mutations in stem cell lines; science marches around the globe
Track Your Package
Amber Dance | Jun 1, 2011 | 7 min read
How to follow stem cells transplanted into living tissue.
Life science in space
Sam Jaffe(sam.jaffe@verizon.net) | Feb 4, 2003 | 3 min read
Shuttle disaster leaves future of space-based research unclear.
Forging a Palace for Research on Aging
Eugene Russo | Feb 4, 2001 | 9 min read
Graphic: Cathleen Heard No one can escape one of the few risk factors common to neurodegenerative diseases, heart disease, and many cancers: age. Within the last decade or so, research on aging, once seen as unfeasible and impractical, has become the legitimate purview of many scientists who hope to prolong life, improve quality of later life, and delay humans' decay at the cellular and genetic level. By viewing aging as a fundamental root of other diseases, researchers studying the mechanisms

Run a Search

ADVERTISEMENT