Over the course of evolution, the human heart has largely lost its ability to regenerate. Our distant ancestors were not ...
A naturally occurring gene called Cyclin A2 (CCNA2), which turns off after birth in humans, can actually make new, functioning heart cells and help the heart repair itself from injury, including a ...
The Cyclin A2 gene (CCNA2), which turns off after birth in humans, can promote cardiac repair in adult human cardiomyocytes.
By electrically stimulating macrophages, scientists at Trinity College Dublin have found a way to calm inflammation and ...
UCSF researchers shed light on how cells under stress can change their identity in harmful ways, contributing to pulmonary ...
Researchers found that losing a second protein, FIGNL1, allows cancer cells missing BRCA2 to restore DNA repair by reloading ...
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev's Prof. Alon Monsonego had discovered that T helper lymphocytes, a subset of immune cells ...
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Lab-grown organoid offers a platform to study how liver scarring develops
As chronic liver disease becomes more widespread, researchers at Science Tokyo have developed a lab-grown organoid that ...
When it comes to treating disease, one promising avenue is addressing the presence of senescent cells. These cells—also known ...
If cancer is a disease of overabundance, where cells divide without restraint and tumors grow despite the body's best ...
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