Contact Us marketing@medicilon.com
Medicilon Logo
|
search icon search icon contact icon menu icon
Medicilon Logo
|
search icon close search icon contact icon menu icon
Message
Contact Us
Close Button
Back To Top
Online Message×
Click switch
Close Button
News and Events

Featured Stories

Hot information:
Top 10 Global CDMO Enterprises| The Meaning of IND, NDA and ANDA| Top 10 Global Clinical Research Organizations in 2021
Oct 11,2017
A Mutation Supercharges Tumor-Suppressor
Cancer researchers have long hailed p53, a tumor-suppressor protein, for its ability to keep unruly cells from forming tumors. But for such a highly studied protein, p53 has hidden its tactics well. Scientists have identified a "super-mutant” variant of the tumor suppressor protein p53, which boosts the transcription factor's ability to prevent pancreatic cancer developmentRead more
More
A Mutation Supercharges Tumor-Suppressor
Oct 11,2017
Small Molecule Helps Semi-Suicidal Cancer Cells Pull the Trigger
Cancer cells are often primed for suicide, but many of them hesitate to pull the trigger. They suppress apoptosis, the suicidal urge, by overexpressing antiapoptotic proteins, which counter proapoptotic proteins and prevent BAX, the "executioner molecule,” from being activated. Cancer cells, however, may be encouraged to follow through on suicidal urges by a newly developedRead more
More
Small Molecule Helps Semi-Suicidal Cancer Cells Pull the Trigger
Oct 10,2017
Good Gut Bacteria Linked to Melanoma Immunotherapy Response
In a recent study, researchers have found a link between an individual's gut bacteria and their response to anticancer immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy (ICT). A team of researchers at the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center in Texas carried out what they claim is the first prospective study looking at the effects of human gutRead more
More
Good Gut Bacteria Linked to Melanoma Immunotherapy Response
Oct 10,2017
How Do Acute Viral Infections Turn Chronic?
Infections caused by viruses, such as respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, measles, parainfluenza and Ebola, are typically considered acute. These viruses cause disease quickly and live within a host for a limited time.   A team of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania became curious why certain, seemingly acute, viral infections can persist for extendedRead more
More
Oct 09,2017
Alcohol Addiction Therapy Resensitizes Resistant NSCLC to Chemotherapy
Scientists in Ireland have had positive results from a lab-based study using a well-known alcohol aversion drug to try to combat chemotherapy resistance in the most common type of lung cancer, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLA). The drug, disulfiram, also known as Antabuse, blocks aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), which is a key enzyme involved in metabolizingRead more
More
Alcohol Addiction Therapy Resensitizes Resistant NSCLC to Chemotherapy
Oct 09,2017
Rapid Antibiotic Resistance Test Turns on the LAMP
Looking back through antiquity, it's not difficult to imagine how many lives would have been spared horrible anguish and death if antibiotic drugs had been discovered sooner. Conversely, the overuse of those same compounds, starting at a much earlier date, would probably make microbial drug resistance even worse than the exponential rise we are currentlyRead more
More
Rapid Antibiotic Resistance Test Turns on the LAMP
Oct 06,2017
Tea Aids Weight Loss through Microbiome Alteration
For decades, new age health gurus and tea aficionados have expounded the benefits of drinking the brewed elixir. In recent years, scientific evidence has backed some of the health claims – especially in relation to modest weight loss – although specific molecular mechanisms for how tea exerted its influence on cells of the body hasRead more
More
Tea Aids Weight Loss through Microbiome Alteration
Oct 06,2017
Molecular Pathway Transmits Itches, but Not Ouches
Along the signaling pathways connecting the skin and the brain, there are gatekeepers, neurotransmitters that relay signals, or not, depending on whether the signals are of the sort the brain interprets as itching sensations, or pain sensations. These gatekeepers, found recently by scientists based at North Carolina University, raise the possibility that drugs could beRead more
More
Molecular Pathway Transmits Itches, but Not Ouches
Oct 05,2017
Immunotherapy for Treating Malaria
A molecule that prevents the immune system from attacking cancer may play a similar role with malaria. A new study by researchers at the University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine shows that targeting an immune checkpoint molecule at the right time during infection allows mice to quickly clear malaria. Importantly the treated mice alsoRead more
More
Immunotherapy for Treating Malaria
Oct 05,2017
Extracellular Vesicles Used as Novel Approach for Tissue Repair
Scientists have found a way of mimicking our body's natural healing process, using cell derived nano-sized particles called vesicles, to repair damaged tissue.   The paper ("Annexin-Enriched Osteoblast-Derived Vesicles Act as an Extracellular Site of Mineral Nucleation within Developing Stem Cell Cultures”), published in Scientific Reports, illustrates a novel method to bone regeneration, stimulating cells toRead more
More
Extracellular Vesicles Used as Novel Approach for Tissue Repair