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Top 10 Global CDMO Enterprises| The Meaning of IND, NDA and ANDA| Top 10 Global Clinical Research Organizations in 2021
Mar 03,2017
Team Describes Novel High-Throughput Cancer Screening System
    Duke University scientists say they have discovered a method to detect signs of cancer on a cell-by-cell basis using two lasers and a camera. A number of medical devices currently in use and in clinical trials around the world look for increases in cellular stiffness as an indicator of cancerous tissue. These instruments, however, rely onRead more
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Team Describes Novel High-Throughput Cancer Screening System
Mar 03,2017
Soil Bacteria Compound May Yield Potent New Drug for Tuberculosis
    Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis. While it can affect any organ of the body, it is most commonly found in the lungs. Most cases are treatable and curable, but people can die if they do not receive proper treatment.  As one of the top ten leading causes of deathRead more
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Soil Bacteria Compound May Yield Potent New Drug for Tuberculosis
Mar 02,2017
Efficient Single Nucleotide Editing with CRISPR
    Cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, Huntington's disease and phenylketonuria are all examples of disorders caused by the mutation of a single nucleotide, a building block of DNA. The human DNA consists of approximately 3 billion nucleotides of four types: Adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). In some cases, the difference of justRead more
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Efficient Single Nucleotide Editing with CRISPR
Mar 02,2017
Do Not Sniff at Mucus Proteomics, or You Will Blow Chance to Confirm Viral Infection
    A runny nose is a runny nose is a runny nose—always something indeterminate. It could indicate a cold, or maybe a bacterial infection. But which? Your Kleenex won't tell you. And in ordinary circumstances, a doctor won't either. So, you might be tempted to ask for an antibiotic, even though the drug would be uselessRead more
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Do Not Sniff at Mucus Proteomics, or You Will Blow Chance to Confirm Viral Infection
Mar 01,2017
New Research Explains Why a Common Bacterium Can Cause Severe Illness
    As much as we try to avoid it, ­we are constantly sharing germs with those around us. But even when two people have the same infection, the resulting illnesses can be dramatically different—mild for one person, severe or even life-threatening for the other.     Scientists from the Rockefeller University have led a team of researchers toRead more
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New Research Explains Why a Common Bacterium Can Cause Severe Illness
Mar 01,2017
A New Mechanism for Genetic Risk in Schizophrenia
    New research has identified sections of DNA associated with altered regulation of gene expression underlying schizophrenia. The implicated loci contribute to schizophrenia risk by affecting alternative splicing, part of the process that translates the same DNA code into multiple different proteins. This insight into the molecular etiology of schizophrenia, published on February 27 in NatureRead more
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Feb 28,2017
Researchers Aim to Disrupt Egg Production in Mosquito
    Mosquitoes are considered to be the deadliest animal on the planet, as the viral and parasitic infections they carry and spread have inflicted a tremendous burden on human morbidity and mortality. While many of these mosquito-borne infections have very diverse pathologies, they share a commonality in the mosquitoes themselves.     For instance, the mosquito Aedes aegypti,Read more
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Researchers Aim to Disrupt Egg Production in Mosquito
Feb 28,2017
CAR T Cells More Powerful When Built With CRISPR
    A T cell, or T lymphocyte, is a type of lymphocyte (a subtype of white blood cell) that plays a central role in cell-mediated immunity. T cells can be distinguished from other lymphocytes, such as B cells and natural killer cells, by the presence of a T-cell receptor on the cell surface.         WhenRead more
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CAR T Cells More Powerful When Built With CRISPR
Feb 27,2017
T Regulatory Cells Support Bone Marrow Plasma Cell Populations
    In bone marrow, immune cells called regulatory T cells closely interact with plasma cells and support them.     A research team led by investigators at the University of Pennsylvania, School of Veterinary Medicine says it has come to a better understanding of how plasma cells—long-lived B cells that reside in the bone marrow and churn outRead more
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Feb 27,2017
Drug Treatment Could Combat Hearing Loss
    Within the inner ear, thousands of hair cells detect sound waves and translate them into nerve signals that allow us to hear speech, music, and other everyday sounds.  Each of us has just 15,000 cochlear hair cells, which is a problem because our hearing wanes a little bit every time one of these cells isRead more
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Drug Treatment Could Combat Hearing Loss