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 …
CN Bio declares dispatch of medication digestion and wellbeing poisonousness testing administrations Kumar Jeetendra | October 31, 2020 Liver toxicity is a principal safety concern during drug discovery and development, with the potential to terminate expensive clinical trials already underway. The new services will incorporate the Company’s advanced Liver-on-Chip technology and experience in the field to enable researchers to create predictive and human-relevant data, improving the translatability from discovery to clinic, and hastening …
SARS-CoV-2 hereditary changes may have made COVID-19 more infectious Kumar Jeetendra | October 31, 2020 A study involving over 5,000 COVID-19 patients in Houston finds the virus which causes the disease is accumulating genetic mutations, one of which may have made it longer infectious. According to the paper published in the peer reviewed journal mBIO, that mutation, known as D614G, is found in the spike protein that pries open our …
Drug used to control pulse may improve malignant growth patients’ reaction to immunotherapy Kumar Jeetendra | November 1, 2020 The exact same biochemical triggers which spur a”flight or fight” reaction once we encounter threats may help tumor cells to thrive. A group of researchers from Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center is looking at ways to interrupt that dynamic so that cancer therapies can be effective. Their latest work, published today in Clinical Cancer Research, …
Washing hands and Halloween candy can diminish COVID-19 introduction hazard Kumar Jeetendra | November 2, 2020 New research indicates that COVID-19 exposure risk from contaminated candy might be successfully mitigated either by washing hands and washing candy with a simple at-home technique. A group of researchers published this work today in mSystems, an open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology. The researchers enrolled 10 recently diagnosed asymptomatic or mildly/moderately symptomatic …
Blood vessel deformities start in vein cells Kumar Jeetendra | November 3, 2020 In the condition called cavernoma, lesions appear in a cluster of blood vessels in the brain, spinal cord or retina. Researchers from Uppsala University can now reveal, at molecular level, these changes originate in vein cells. This new understanding of the condition creates possibility of developing better treatments for patients. The study was published in …
Improving affectability of fluid biopsy utilizing ‘inexactly stacked’ identification layers Kumar Jeetendra | November 4, 2020 By detecting DNA fragments in body fluids like urine, some kinds of cancer may already be tracked in an early stage. But in order to capture them, detection sensitivity must be improved. Researchers at the University of Twente in The Netherlands (MESA+ Institute) use electrically charged polymers for this. Not only one layer of this, …
Engineered counter acting agent may forestall Covid from contaminating human cells Kumar Jeetendra | November 4, 2020 By screening hundreds of artificial antibodies, researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden and EMBL Hamburg in Germany have identified an antibody that may prevent the new coronavirus from infecting human cells. The analysis, which is printed in the journal Nature Communications, also reveals how electrons can be quickly generated in the event of future pandemics. …
Researchers use quality treatment to recover harmed optic nerve filaments Kumar Jeetendra | November 5, 2020 Scientists have used gene therapy to regenerate damaged nerve fibers from the eye, in a discovery that could aid the development of new treatments for glaucoma, one of the main causes of blindness worldwide. Axons – nerve pathways – in the adult central nervous system (CNS) do not normally regenerate after injury and disease, meaning …
AI calculations help anticipate out-of-emergency clinic heart failure endurance Kumar Jeetendra | November 9, 2020 Using neighborhood and neighborhood data in combination with existing data sources creates a more precise prediction on a patient’s recovery prospects after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), according to preliminary study to be presented in the American Heart Association’s Resuscitation Science Symposium 2020. The 2020 meeting will be held virtually, November 14-16, and will feature …
Cell Guidance Systems launches Exo-spin 96 kit for exosomes purification Kumar Jeetendra | November 10, 2020 Cell Guidance Systems Ltda specialist in exosome study reagents and services, today announced the launching of a brand new product for the purification of exosomes from blood and other samples. The Exo-spin™ 96 exosome purification kit allows researchers to purify exosome samples in the standard 96 well plate format. The Exo-spin 96 kit is based …
Microorganisms in the lungs could impact lung cancer progression and prognosis Kumar Jeetendra | November 11, 2020 Bottom Line: Enrichment of the lungs with oral commensal microbes has been correlated with advanced stage disease, worse prognosis, and tumor progression in patients with lung cancer. Journal in Which the research was Published: Cancer Discovery, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research Author: Leopoldo Segal, MD, director of the Lung Microbiome Program, …