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Andrew T. Lombardo, PhD, assistant professor of biochemistry, has received a $1.9 million National Institutes of Health grant to study cell polarity signaling.
Scientists discovered that axons don’t quite look like straight cables. Instead, axons often appear like pearls on a string.
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Live Science on MSNStar-shaped brain cells may underpin the brain's massive memory storageA new machine learning model shows that star-shaped brain cells may be responsible for the brain's memory capacity, and ...
Breakthrough metasurface acts like a smart mirror for electromagnetic waves, automatically adapting its reflection without ...
Mitochondria Are More Than Powerhouses—They’re the Motherboard of the Cell ...
A paper titled "Functional implications of unusual NOS and SONOS covalent linkages found in proteins," by Matthew D. Lloyd, ...
While it has long been understood that autism often runs in families, exactly how inherited changes in DNA lead to the ...
Developmental and synthetic biologist Michael Levin redefines what life really is, how intelligence works, and what the ...
Scientists have uncovered a previously unknown type of molecular motion inside DNA-based droplets: instead of spreading randomly, guest molecules advance in an organized wave. This surprising ...
Viral mechanism uses mitochondrial remodeling to block immune response, presenting a new drug target
Researchers at The Wistar Institute have identified a previously unknown mechanism by which viruses can reprogram mitochondrial structure ... The cell can't coordinate its immune signaling to ...
3don MSN
Researchers have identified a form of molecular motion that has not previously been observed. When what are known as "guest molecules"—molecules that are accommodated within a host molecule—penetrate ...
Addressing the emissions of a market where equipment can range from small generators to a 1000-ton vehicle is difficult.
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