The nationwide experiment will initially include around 100,000 volunteers.
Painful snake bites may hold clues to developing analgesic drugs.
Painful snake bites may hold clues to developing analgesic drugs.
Ben Barres of Stanford University described glia’s roles in ensuring neurons’ proper synapse formation and in responding to brain injury.
From a plastic-munching coral to see-through frogs, here are The Scientist’s favorite images from 2017.
Syrian hamsters and thirteen-lined ground squirrels are tolerant of chilly temperatures, thanks to amino acid changes in a cold-responsive ion channel.
Upping a gene’s expression in rat brains made them better learners and normalized the activity of hundreds of other genes to resemble the brains of younger animals.
The new test could improve upon two current methods to diagnose tuberculosis—a skin test or culturing bacteria from saliva, both of which take days.
Single-cell genome analyses reveal the amount of mutations a human brain cell will collect from its fetal beginnings until death.
T-cell therapies are not just for cancer. Researchers are also advancing immunotherapy methods to protect bone marrow transplant patients from viral infections.
In chapter 3, “The Sense of Sensibility,” author Wendy Jones uses scenes from one of Jane Austen’s most celebrated novels to illustrate the functioning of the body’s stress response system.
Aggressive little marine predators, mantis shrimps possess a mushroom body that appears identical to the one found in insects.