“Encouragingly, the findings suggest that even a modest amount of walking each day, around 5,000 steps, is linked to a slower build-up of tau protein in the brain, one of the key drivers of ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Study reveals how "P bodies" heavily influence a cell's fate
How do stem cells know what to become? Nearly three decades after scientists isolated the first human embryonic stem cells, researchers are still working hard to understand precisely how a single, ...
The activation and deactivation of apoptosis is a promising field of research in basic biomedical research. The team led by Prof. Franz Hagn from the Chair of Structural Membrane Biochemistry at the ...
23hon MSN
How new advances in 3D bioprinting, organoids and organs on-a-chip aid in the fight against cancer
Scientists are exploring leading-edge technologies that could transform how cancer is studied, detected and treated by ...
Stocktwits on MSN
Capricor Therapeutics Stock Becomes Talk Of Retail Town On DMD Study; Retail Sees New Hope After Sarepta Setback
Capricor’s peer-reviewed publication in Biomedicines reinforced the scientific foundation of its Duchenne therapy Deramiocel, ...
Dopamine is often called the brain's "motivation molecule," but for me, it represents something deeper, a window into how ...
New research from Johns Hopkins Medicine shows that the enzyme biliverdin reductase A (BVRA) plays a direct protective role ...
When insects attack your garden, plants don’t simply endure the assault in silence. New research reveals they broadcast molecular distress signals to warn their neighbors about incoming threats.
New research from Johns Hopkins Medicine shows that the enzyme biliverdin reductase A (BVRA) plays a direct protective role ...
News Medical on MSN
New switch for programmed cell death identified
Science learns from nature's methods - Potential benefits for future therapies against cancer and Alzheimer's disease - Joint research by TUM and Helmholtz Munich In the fight against disease, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results