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
Mar 16,2016
ELISA standard operation and common problem analysis
1. Key points of ELISA standard operation High-quality reagents, good instruments and correct operation are necessary conditions to ensure the accuracy and reliability of ELISA test results. The distilled or deionized water used in ELISA, including those used for washing, should be fresh and high-quality purified water required by our company with a conductivity ofRead more
More
ELISA standard operation and common problem analysis
Mar 15,2016
Too Much Good Cholesterol is Not Always Good for Health
We've all heard about the importance of raising HDL, or the so-called "good” cholesterol, and lowering LDL, or "bad” cholesterol, to improve heart health. While we've come to assume HDL cholesterol is an inherently good thing, a new study shows that for a certain group of patients, this is not always the case. The studyRead more
More
Mar 15,2016
Tunable Form of CRISPR Is an Efficient Regulator of Stem Cell Expression
    Combining powerful technologies in biology can often have an exceptionally synergistic effect that leads to fundamental breakthroughs in how researchers look at normal metabolic pathways or aberrant disease states. This is what researchers from the Gladstone Institute hope will emerge from their recent use of a relatively new variation of the CRISPR-Cas9 system on theRead more
More
Mar 15,2016
Environmentally sensitive small molecule fluorescent probes for hERG potassium channels
Associate professor of shandong university professor min-yong li and Du Lvpei reported at the current activity of the best hERG potassium channel inhibitors astemizole for frame structure, the introduction of environmentally sensitive fluorophore in structure, the design for a class of novel hERG potassium channels small molecular fluorescent probe, horizontal selective markers used in livingRead more
More
Environmentally sensitive small molecule fluorescent probes for hERG potassium channels
Mar 14,2016
Stem Cells to Treat Blindness
    As if it were ripped from the pages of a science-fiction novel, scientists have been able to produce multiple types of eye tissue starting with just a pure culture of human stem cells. More amazingly, the researchers described transplantation procedures of the newly derived tissues that were able to repair damage to the front ofRead more
More
Mar 14,2016
Medicilon Boston Office Officially Opened
In order to further expand our business, as well as to provide timely and better consulting services to our clients in the Boston area, Medicilon Boston office will start operation from March 1, 2016.  Medicilon welcome all the clients to visit our Boston office for further information.     The establishment of the Boston officeRead more
More
Mar 11,2016
Researchers Develop Molecule That Can Inhibit Enzyme Associated With Onset of Stroke
    University of Nebraska–Lincoln scientists partnered with medical researchers from the National University of Singapore to develop a molecule that can inhibit an enzyme linked with the onset of stroke.       Most strokes occur when a disruption of blood flow prevents oxygen and glucose from reaching brain tissue, ultimately killing neurons and other cells. The teamRead more
More
Mar 11,2016
Nanoparticles Reveal the Structure and Function of Membrane Proteins
Scientists at the Karolinska Institute have developed a nanoparticle technology that can be used to stabilize membrane proteins so that their structure can be studied in a lipid environment. The technique ("A Saposin-Lipoprotein Nanoparticle System for Membrane Proteins”), described in Nature Methods, makes it possible to access drug targets that previously could not be investigatedRead more
More
Nanoparticles Reveal the Structure and Function of Membrane Proteins
Mar 10,2016
How Cancer Cells Fuel Their Growth
Cancer cells are notorious for their ability to divide uncontrollably and generate hordes of new tumor cells. Most of the fuel consumed by these rapidly proliferating cells is glucose, a type of sugar. Scientists had believed that most of the cell mass that makes up new cells, including cancer cells, comes from that glucose. However,Read more
More
Mar 10,2016
Researchers Reverse Signs of Naturally Occurring Chronic Periodontitis
    Periodontitis, a gum disease present in nearly half of all adults in the United States, involves inflammation, bleeding and bone loss. In its severe form, it is associated with systemic inflammatory conditions such as atherosclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. Few treatment options exist beyond dental scaling and root planning, done in an attempt to reduce plaqueRead more
More