In experiments, researchers showed that the disease-spreading insects couldn’t resist the sweet smell of a fungus that infected and killed them.
A cup of tea in 2006 changed genetic engineering forever. Jill Banfield, a University of California at Berkeley ecosystem scientist and 1999 MacArthur Foundation fellow, had become curious in 2006 ...
Advances in cancer immunotherapy from immune checkpoint modulation to adoptive cell transfer of tumour-infiltrating ...
A research team led by the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) and collaborating with the Biomedical Research ...
The bacterium known as Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an unwelcome visitor in the human body. Serious infections can result when a ...
Changing Weather Patterns Create New Challenges Climate change and variability - marked by rising temperatures, altered precipitation, and increased extreme weather - have significant impacts on ...
The differences in early immune response to influenza viral infection are shaped by genetic ancestry in a cell-type specific manner. Researchers from the University of Chicago (IL, USA) and University ...
Australian researchers have identified two nervous system components that drive tumor growth in gastrointestinal cancers, ...