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Top 10 Global CDMO Enterprises| The Meaning of IND, NDA and ANDA| Top 10 Global Clinical Research Organizations in 2021
Sep 14,2016
Medicilon Wish You A Happy Mid-Autumn Festival
    Falling on the 15th day of the 8th month according to the Chinese lunar calendar (Sept 15, 2016), the Mid-Autumn Festival is the second grandest festival after the Spring Festival in China. It takes its name from the fact that it is always celebrated in the middle of the autumn season. The day is also knownRead more
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Medicilon Wish You A Happy Mid-Autumn Festival
Sep 14,2016
Gut Microbes of Baby May Predict Risk of Asthma, Allergies
    The impact of the gut microbiome on future health outcomes, especially in newborns, has been a controversial topic over the past several years, with scientists uncovering conflicting data about the microbial communities' prognostic abilities. However now, a new study by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and the Henry Ford Health SystemRead more
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Sep 14,2016
Genome Study Results May Lead to Genetic Test for Hypertension
    Several large international teams of researchers report data in Nature Genetics that more than doubles the number of sites in the human genome tied to blood pressure regulation. One of the studies (“The Genetics of Blood Pressure Regulation and Its Target Organs from Association Studies in 342,415 Individuals”) by Johns Hopkins University scientists, in collaboration withRead more
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Sep 13,2016
Liquid Biopsy Better Option for Advanced Lung Cancer Patients
    For patients with advanced lung cancer, a non-invasive liquid biopsy may be a more effective and suitable alternative to the gold standard tissue biopsy to detect clinically relevant mutations and help guide their course of treatment.     Investigators at the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania (ACC) have just released data from a newRead more
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Sep 13,2016
Schistosomiasis Infection Linked to Heat Shock Protein
    Scientists say that a protein known for helping cells withstand stress may also act as a switch that triggers free-swimming Schistosoma larvae to begin penetrating the skin and transforming into the parasitic flatworms that burden more than 240 million people worldwide with schistosomiasis.       The discovery, by a pair of researchers at Case Western ReserveRead more
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Sep 12,2016
Linking RNA Structure And Function
    Several years ago, biologists discovered a new type of genetic material known as long noncoding RNA. This RNA does not code for proteins and is copied from sections of the genome once believed to be "junk DNA.”     Since then, scientists have found evidence that long noncoding RNA, or lncRNA, plays roles in many cellular processes,Read more
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Linking RNA Structure And Function
Sep 12,2016
Unique Hair Proteins are Better than DNA in Human Identification
    DNA has met its rival (or partner) in identifying individuals in crime scenes. Scientists have discovered a new and better way in identifying someone through sequencing hair proteins.     Combing through the hair proteome, scientists from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) have uncovered markers that could be used to identify individual people. Although the scientistsRead more
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Unique Hair Proteins are Better than DNA in Human Identification
Sep 09,2016
Antibacterials in Dust May Contribute to Antibiotic Resistance
Just days after the FDA ruled that antimicrobials are to be removed from liquid and bar soaps, yet more suspicion is falling on antibacterial ingredients, which are exempt from the upcoming ban, provided they occur in other products, such as paints, baby toys, bedding, and kitchen utensils. Antimicrobials have been found in indoor dust, alongRead more
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Antibacterials in Dust May Contribute to Antibiotic Resistance
Sep 09,2016
Cells Take Call, Then Eat and Run
    When cells get together, they have a curious way of breaking bread. They take bites out of each other, by means of a process called bidirectional trans-endocytosis. Then they go their separate ways, moving as needed to form or repair the body's tissues. Although cells have long been known to tear themselves away from eachRead more
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Sep 08,2016
Beating Alcohol Addiction
    There may be a way to switch off the urge for compulsive drinking, according to investigators at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI).     "We can completely reverse alcohol dependence by targeting a network of neurons,” said Olivier George, Ph.D., an assistant professor who led the study.     The study ("Recruitment of a Neuronal Ensemble in the CentralRead more
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Beating Alcohol Addiction