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Top 10 Global CDMO Enterprises| The Meaning of IND, NDA and ANDA| Top 10 Global Clinical Research Organizations in 2021
May 15,2017
Introducing of Plasmid Sequencing
Plasmids are cloning vectors that are widely used in molecular biology and they play important roles in the laboratory. Plasmids are the small and circular pieces of DNA that replicate independently of the host chromosome. The first plasmids used in the lab were derivatives of naturally-occurring plasmids found in bacteria. Since their discovery, molecular biologistsRead more
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Introducing of Plasmid Sequencing
May 12,2017
Malaria During Pregnancy Can Alter Infant Immunity
    New evidence suggests that mothers infected with malaria during pregnancy, with parasites that have anchored themselves to cells within the placenta, placental malaria, may be a double-edged sword for their newborns. A group of scientists led by investigators at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has just published data suggesting that mothers infected with theRead more
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Malaria During Pregnancy Can Alter Infant Immunity
May 12,2017
Novel Mass Spec Approach Provides New Insights on Protein Import into Organelles
A team of researchers led by Bettina Warscheid, Ph.D., from the University of Freiburg and André Schneider, Ph.D., from the University of Bern has developed a method called "ImportOmics” that enables scientists to determine the localization of proteins that are imported via specific entry gates into cellular organelles. Knowing the exact localization of individual proteins,Read more
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Novel Mass Spec Approach Provides New Insights on Protein Import into Organelles
May 12,2017
Drug-Resistant Superbugs Originate Before Age of Dinosaurs
    Leading hospital "superbugs,” known as enterococci, originated well before the age of dinosaurs, a new study said Thursday (May 11, 2017).     These pathogens arose from an ancestor that dates back 450 million years, about the time when animals were first crawling onto land, according to the study published in the US journal Cell.     The findingsRead more
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Drug-Resistant Superbugs Originate Before Age of Dinosaurs
May 11,2017
Manufacturing Technique Can Make Proteins Less Effective
Biopharma and food businesses working with proteins now have access to better information about how a type of fluid flow used in manufacturing processes can affect the quality of their products.   This process which can be highly damaging to bio-molecules, such as protein-based biopharmaceutical therapeutics, dissolved in the fluid, is known as ‘extensional flow'Read more
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Manufacturing Technique Can Make Proteins Less Effective
May 11,2017
Metabolic Markers Accurately Diagnose Typhoid Fever
    Typhoid fever, also known simply as typhoid, is a bacterial infection due to Salmonella typhi that causes symptoms which may vary from mild to severe and usually begin six to thirty days after exposure.     Scientists have identified a metabolite signature that can accurately distinguish typhoid from other fever-inducing tropical diseases using patient blood samples. The researchRead more
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Metabolic Markers Accurately Diagnose Typhoid Fever
May 10,2017
Platelets Suppress T Cell Immunity Against Cancer
    Platelets are a component of blood whose function is to stop bleeding by clumping and clotting blood vessel injuries.  Platelets do more than promote clotting. They weaken one of the body's immune defenses against cancer. Unfortunately, platelets tend to work against the immuno-oncology treatments that try to strengthen T-cell attacks on cancer.     Platelets, new researchRead more
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May 10,2017
Testosterone May Protect Men From Allergic Asthma
    Testosterone, the male sex hormone, may be the reason why so many more women have asthma than men.  The study found that testosterone suppresses an immune system cell involved in allergic asthma.     In the "battle of the sexes,” physiology often favors females, especially when it pertains to a hormone like testosterone. Yet now, a groupRead more
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Testosterone May Protect Men From Allergic Asthma
May 09,2017
China Builds the World’s Largest Kinase Target Cell Screening Library
Recently, the Chinese Academy of Sciences Hefei Institute of Physical Sciences, Strong Magnetic Field Science Center built the world's largest cancer kinase target based on high-throughput cell screening library. The cell bank contains nearly 70 kinds of cancer kinase target, cell types of more than 150 species, which covering almost the current known and the development of tumor-related all kinase and kinase mutant cells.
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China Builds the World’s Largest Kinase Target Cell Screening Library
May 09,2017
Circadian Clock Changes Can Alter Body's Response to Diet
    The body's internal biological clock is typically set in response to external cues, such as sunlight and temperature. Changes in this temporal schedule can affect a vast array of physiological systems, leading to the manifestation of observable physical changes. Yet, researchers have long been curious whether the circadian clock has an overt effect on theRead more
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Circadian Clock Changes Can Alter Body's Response to Diet