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Top 10 Global CDMO Enterprises| The Meaning of IND, NDA and ANDA| Top 10 Global Clinical Research Organizations in 2021
Dec 22,2015
Lopsided mRNA Expression of Fine Tuning of Protein Production
    Messenger RNA (mRNA) has long been thought of as the middleman in the central dogma of molecular biology (DNA makes RNA and then RNA makes protein), which shuttles genetic information from DNA in the nucleus into the cytoplasm for translation into protein. But new research at The Rockefeller University suggests the molecule is up toRead more
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Lopsided mRNA Expression of Fine Tuning of Protein Production
Dec 21,2015
PDX Mouse Model - "Private Line" Ancient Tomb Individualized Treatment Plan
Now, Medicilon have the PDX models covering colon cancer,lung cancer,gastric cancer,breast cancer,liver cancer,pancreas cancer. Patient-derived tumor xenograft mouse model (PDX model) derived from patient tumor tissue, can be a boon for cancer patients. Individualized PDX models will significantly boost tumor treatment, helping physicians and patients develop a unique and most appropriate treatment plan.
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PDX Mouse Model - "Private Line" Ancient Tomb Individualized Treatment Plan
Dec 21,2015
Big Moves in Protein Structure Prediction and Design
The potential of modular design for brand new proteins that do not exist in the natural world is explored Dec. 16 in the journal Nature. The reports are the latest in a recent series of developments toward custom-designing proteins. Although nature uses the modular approach to construct a dizzying array of proteins, it explores aRead more
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Dec 21,2015
New Approach Being Explored to Overcome Transplant Organ Rejection
    Scientists at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM) say they have found a new cellular structure responsible for previously unexplained rejection of organ transplants. They believe their discovery could one day revolutionize transplantation practice by modifying risk assessment of rejection in people who receive heart, lung, kidney, or liver transplants.     “We have foundRead more
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Dec 18,2015
To Stop Cancer Spread, Take Out Its Nanoscale Communication Channels
Metastasis – or the spread of cancer from one part of the body to other parts – accounts for more than 90 percent of cancer-related deaths. Although the cells that seed metastasis and the sites that they tend to travel to have been increasingly studied over the years, little has been known about how cancerRead more
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Dec 18,2015
Why the Flu Vaccine is Less Effective in the Elderly
    Around this time every year, the flu virus infects up to one-fifth of the US population and kills thousands of people, many of them elderly. A new study now explains why the flu vaccine is less effective at protecting older individuals. More broadly, the findings reveal novel molecular signatures that could be used to predictRead more
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Dec 17,2015
New Step toward Determining the Cause of Multiple Sclerosis
    Scientists at the University of Toronto say they have found another clue in understanding the cause of what drives multiple sclerosis (MS).  MS is a disorder in which the immune system attacks the brain. It has no known cause and no cure.     Normally, immune responses are triggered in lymph nodes and other lymphoid organs toRead more
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Dec 17,2015
New Method Prevents Cells from Premature Halting Protein Production in Genetic Disease
Improperly formed proteins can cause a host of serious illnesses, from muscular dystrophy to cystic fibrosis. A question of enormous import in research, beyond the challenge of determining how malformed proteins contribute to specific disease processes, is figuring out ways to prevent or reduce the pathologies they cause.
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Dec 16,2015
Tiny Cellular Bubbles May Hold Enormous Diagnostic Potential
    Rutgers scientists have uncovered biological pathways in the roundworm that provide insight into how tiny bubbles released by cells can have beneficial health effects, like promoting tissue repair, or may play a diabolical role and carry disease signals for cancer or neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's.       In a new study, published in Current Biology, RutgersRead more
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Tiny Cellular Bubbles May Hold Enormous Diagnostic Potential
Dec 16,2015
Amnesia Renders Cells More Susceptible to Suggestion
    Whether it is a skin cell, a heart cell, a nerve cell, or any other kind of cell, a fully differentiated adult cell stubbornly preserves its identity. The adult cell, or somatic cell, has a kind of memory, and this memory effectively blocks the procedures that scientists would use to reprogram adult cells into pluripotentRead more
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