New calculations bolster specialists in making a quicker and precise finding Kumar Jeetendra | May 19, 2020 The expertise from the world’s top specialists in lung ultrasound was gathered and sorted out in the product application. Their skill is currently rapidly accessible to the clinical network, in a practical way, complimentary, only a couple of snaps away. You simply need to stack the patient’s sweeps and the product naturally contrasts them and …
Novel nanospectroscopy measures biomolecular changes induced by drugs in human cells Kumar Jeetendra | July 20, 2020 Synchrotron InfraRed Nanospectroscopy has been used for the first time to measure biomolecular changes caused by a drug (amiodarone) in human cells (macrophages) and localized at 100 nanometre scale, i.e. two orders of magnitude smaller than the IR wavelength used as probe. This was achieved at the Multimode InfraRed Imaging and Micro-Spectroscopy (MIRIAM) beamline (B22) …
Specialists utilize new way to deal with unwind the systems that lie behind tetraploidy Kumar Jeetendra | July 25, 2020 Cell division is a fundamental process that organisms need to replicate, expand, and make repairs. But when a mistake accomplishes this complex biological process, cellular abnormalities may lead to ailments, for example cancer, where cells are enabled to grow and divide out of control. Their findings were published on April 29 at eLife, an open-access …
Possible connect to brain irritation may clarify the association among MS and exhaustion Kumar Jeetendra | August 27, 2020 As much as 60 percent of individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) report that fatigue is that the disease’s most distressing symptom. And fatigue remains among MS’s puzzles — despite its incidence and significance, the root cause of this symptom remains unclear. In a study published in Neurology Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation, investigators from Brigham and Women’s …
CRISPR-based framework smothers qualities identified with AAV antibody production Kumar Jeetendra | September 9, 2020 Gene therapy generally is based on viruses, such as adeno-associated virus (AAV), to deliver genes into a cell. In the event of CRISPR-based gene therapies, molecular scissors can then snip out a faulty gene, add in a missing arrangement or enact a temporary change in its expression, but the body’s immune response to AAV can …
World’s quickest UV camera records photons progressively Kumar Jeetendra | October 8, 2020 Compressed ultrafast photography (CUP) captures the whole process in real time and unparalleled resolution with only one click. The spatial and temporal information is compressed into a picture and then, with a reconstruction algorithm, it is converted into a movie. Developing a compact instrument for UV Until now, this technique was limited to visible and …
Bruker presents Vutara™ VXL tbest-in-class super-resolution magnifying lens and spatial science investigation abilities Kumar Jeetendra | October 23, 2020 Vutara VXL serves as a biological microscopy workstation for research on DNA, RNA and proteins, from macromolecular complexes and super-structures, to chromatin structure and chromosomal substructures, to studying functional connections in genomes and in various subcellular organelles. This novel system supports innovative spatial biology research in extracellular matrix structures, extracellular vesicles (EV), virology, neuroscience, and …
Researchers devise new technique to plan HIV’s sweet shield in remarkable detail Kumar Jeetendra | October 26, 2020 Scientists from Scripps Research and Los Alamos National Laboratory have devised a method for mapping in unprecedented detail the thickets of slippery sugar molecules which help protect HIV from the immune system. Mapping these shields will give researchers a more comprehensive comprehension of why dinosaurs respond to some spots on the virus but not others, …
Myeloid cells can smother insusceptible reaction, advance cerebrum metastasis Kumar Jeetendra | October 28, 2020 Scientists have long thought that the brain protects itself from an aggressive immune response to keep inflammation down. However, that evolutionary management may work against it when a cancer cell tries to spread to the brain, researchers at the University of Notre Dame have found. In recently published research in the journal Cell, researchers showed …
Cell scientists and bioimaging master collaborate to settle fourth measurement insider facts Kumar Jeetendra | October 29, 2020 Cell biologists at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign and Bar-Ilan University in Israel and a bioimaging expert at the University of Central Florida are teaming up in what they expect may result in a major breakthrough in the understanding of the three-dimensional organization of the nucleus over their role in certain diseases. The dream …
BioMed X Institute Announces Expansion of their Strategic Collaboration with Janssen in Immunology Research Kumar Jeetendra | November 9, 2020 HEIDELBERG, Germany, November 09, 2020 / B3C newswire / — German independent research institute BioMed X adds a further research program in the field of immunology to their existing collaboration with Janssen Research & Development, LLC, one of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson: The new project will focus on the development of …
Patients’ own stem cells can be utilized to develop new bones, study shows Kumar Jeetendra | November 23, 2020 A new, groundbreaking study from the University of Bergen (UiB) shows that a patients’ own stem cells can be used to grow new bone. This can potentially help millions of people who are partially edentulous and have inadequate bone for placement of dental implants. The Maxibone Project, coordinated by Pierre Layrolle, Inserm, University of Nantes, …