History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
40,000-Year Legacy: Neanderthal DNA Still Shapes How We Process Medicine
Modern genetic studies show that up to 4% of human DNA comes from Neanderthals—and some of those ancient genes affect how our ...
That problem is why, even though we’ve had success finding enzymes that break down common plastics like polyesters and PET, they’re only partial solutions to plastic waste. However, researchers aren’t ...
As the use of AI spreads through every industry and becomes more of a part of our lives every day, researchers are also ...
7hon MSN
Study uncovers role of hydroxyl radical in greenhouse gas production during soil drying–rewetting
In a new study published in Global Change Biology, Prof. Zhang Yuanming's team from the Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and ...
Beneath the ocean’s surface, bacteria have evolved specialized enzymes that can digest PET plastic, the material used in bottles and clothes. Researchers at KAUST discovered that a unique molecular ...
Not only do the makers of Kinmemai Premium claim that it’s the world’s best rice, but in 2016 Guinness World Records ...
AZoCleantech on MSN
5 Strategies Making Cheese Production Cheaper and More Sustainable
The study highlights five innovative strategies for enhancing cheese manufacturing efficiency and sustainability, addressing ...
Health Beet on MSN
The Easiest Way to Keep an Banana from Turning Brown
Refrigerate your banana once it’s ripe. Cold slows the enzymes that cause browning and tamps down ethylene-driven ripening. The peel may darken in the fridge, but the fruit inside stays pale, firm, ...
Far beneath the ocean's surface, researchers have found bacteria that can digest plastic, using specialized enzymes that evolved alongside humanity's ...
The discovery opens a path to the sustainable synthesis of anti-inflammatory and anti-tumor agents. Scientists at UBC Okanagan have revealed how plants create mitraphylline, a rare natural substance ...
Pichia pastoris is emerging as a versatile, efficient alternative for protein production, bridging microbial and mammalian expression systems.
Invited presentation followed by panel discussion on the next wave of innovation in immunotherapy of cancer: Paul Peter Tak, M.D., Ph.D., ...
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