In the latest
issue of the journal Cell Systems, Berger and colleagues present a theoretical analysis that demonstrates why their previous compression schemes have been so successful.
In the August 3, 2017
issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell, the researchers provide «proof - of - concept.»
Study findings will appear in the February 16 print
issue of the journal Cell Report.
Fishel and Kolodner's findings appear in this week's
issue of the journal Cell; a paper by Vogelstein and his colleagues will appear in the same journal in two weeks» time.
The findings were published in an article, «Angiogenin promotes hematopoietic regeneration by dichotomously regulating quiescence of stem and progenitor cells,» in the August 11, 2016
issue of the journal Cell.
CellNet and its application to stem cell engineering are described in two back - to - back papers in the August 14
issue of the journal Cell.
Their work appears in the Aug. 17
issue of the journal Cell Chemical Biology.
The work published in the current
issue of the journal Cell includes collaborators comprised of computational and evolutionary biologists and leading malaria experts from Baylor, Columbia University Medical Center, Princeton University, Pennsylvania State University and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).
The researchers report their results in the October 16, 2014 online
issue of the journal Cell.
That's according to research in the May
issue of the journal Cell Metabolism.
The research, conducted by Stowers Associate Investigator Kausik Si, Ph.D., and his team, is published in the current
issue of the journal Cell.
Potentially, that could lead to a cure,» says Xue, who is senior author of the study published in the September
issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell as the cover story.
An international team led by metabolism experts Matthias Tschöp (Helmholtz Zentrum München / Technische Universität Müchen), Richard diMarchi (Indiana University) and Timo Müller (Helmholtz Zentrum München) report in the current
issue of the journal Cell that liver - specific delivery of the thyroid hormone T3 using glucagon corrects obesity, glucose intolerance, fatty liver disease and atherosclerosis without causing adverse effects in other tissues.
The discovery sheds light on the tiny «environments» that stem cells occupy in animal bodies and may help explain how stem cells in tumors replenish themselves, the researchers report in the May 8
issue of the journal Cell Reports.
A paper describing the work appears in the June 1
issue of the journal Cell.
They report their findings in the latest
issue of the journal Cell, now available online.
According to their study, published in the current
issue of the journal Cell, these genes — from the Wnt family — interact with another set of previously identified growth factors to induce limb formation in chick embryos.
Researchers may be on the verge of explaining how changes in the brain caused by hunger can lead to increased appetite.In the February 20
issue of the journal Cell, researchers from the Howard...
In the latest
issue of the journal Cell, a team of scientists led by Gladstone Institutes and University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Investigator Nevan Krogan, PhD, Texas A&M University's Craig Kaplan, PhD, and UCSF Professor Christine Guthrie, PhD, describe a new technique — called the point mutant E-MAP (pE - MAP) approach — that gives researchers the ability to pinpoint and map thousands of interactions between each of an enzyme's many moving parts.
The current report, which appears in the May 4, 2012
issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell, shows that these cells can also change their epigenomes, the patterns of DNA modifications that regulate the activity of specific genes — sometimes radically.
But gene therapy has the potential to solve this problem, according to a perspective article from physician - scientists at NewYork - Presbyterian Hospital / Weill Cornell Medical Center published in a recent
issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell.
The researchers, led by Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator Harinder Singh, published their findings in the August 25, 2006,
issue of the journal Cell.
Ulitsky and Shkumatava, who report their findings in this week's
issue of the journal Cell, tested the function of two of the 29 lincRNAs by knocking them down in zebrafish embryos.
And according to a recent study published in the Oct. 3
issue of the journal Cell, by Dongsheng Cai and colleagues at the University of Wisconsin, the brain may react to excess food as if it were a pathogen.
Published in the recent
issue of the journal Cell Metabolism, new data points to adrenalin levels produced by exercise as the key to thwarting malignant growth.
Not exact matches
In addition, scientific
journals continue to push the
issue of embryonic stem -
cell research in their editorial and commentary sections, using it as a prime criterion to grade political candidates.
The findings, published by
Cell Press in the March 8
issue of the
journal Neuron, may help to explain why young children often struggle to control selfish impulses, even when they know better, and could impact educational strategies designed to promote successful social behavior.
In its 20 and 27 April
issues, Science Signaling presents a set
of Teaching Resources as well as student - authored
Journal Clubs that cover topics ranging from signaling in
cells of the immune system to signaling in plants.
Levels
of a nerve
cell signaling molecule called substance P — measured in tear samples — might be a useful marker
of diabetes - related nerve damage (neuropathy), suggests a study in the July
issue of Optometry and Vision Science, the official
journal of the American Academy
of Optometry.
Two genetic mutations in liver
cells may drive tumor formation in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), the second most common form
of liver cancer, according to a research published in the July
issue of the
journal Nature.
In the November 19
issue of the Biophysical
Journal, a
Cell Press publication, researchers provide new insights into how these spirochetes penetrate tissue barriers.
In a study in the current
issue of the
Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases, researchers treated these stem
cells with leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), which effectively maintained the undifferentiated state
of the satellite
cells and enhanced their transplantation efficiency.
In a paper published in the current online
issue of the
journal Small, titled «Immune
Cell - Mediated Biodegradable Theranostic Nanoparticles for Melanoma Targeting,» the researchers report the use
of a novel biodegradable and photoluminescent poly (lactic acid) nanoparticle, loaded with melanoma - specific drugs with immune
cells as the nanoparticle carriers.
In the online
issue of the
journal Nature, the researchers report a new function
of FAM134B in the constant renewal
of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), an important
cell organelle.
Adult drug resistant cancer
cells may contribute to this problem, and the authors discuss these and other cancer drug resistance mechanisms in their recent publication in the September
issue of the
journal Cancers.
The research, published in the current
issue of the
journal Science, demonstrates that brain
cells, known as astrocytes, which play fundamental roles in nearly all aspects
of brain function, can be adjusted by neurons in response to injury and disease.
The study was published in the advanced online edition
of the
journal Nature
Cell Biology and will be the cover
of the July
issue.
But in the 1 September
issue of the
Journal of Clinical Investigation, cardiologist Michael Parmacek and his colleagues at the University
of Chicago describe how they deleted two genes from the common cold virus to make it unable to cause any sniffling or fever, then replaced them with a marker gene that turns out an easily detected protein and the SM22 promoter, which turns on expression
of genes in smooth muscle
cells that surround arteries.
Writing in the May 4 online
issue of the
journal Scientific Reports, researchers at University
of California, San Diego School
of Medicine used a powerful statistical tool called «design
of experiments» or DOE to determine the optimal
cell culture formula to grow and produce hPSCs.
A paper by Yan's research group, published in the Jan. 8
issue of the multidisciplinary
journal Nature Communications, helps pin down the basic mechanisms
of the fuel -
cell reaction on platinum, which will help researchers create alternative electrocatalysts.
In a study presented in the featured clinical investigation article
of the November
issue of The
Journal of Nuclear Medicine, they used 18F - fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET / CT imaging to show that the amount
of cell - free tumor DNA circulating in the bloodstream correlates with tumor metabolism (linked to cancer aggressiveness), not tumor burden (amount
of cancer in the body).
The findings
of the research are to be published in the December 2014
issue of the scientific
journal Immunity, a
Cell Press
journal that specialises in publishing high - impact research into the function
of the immune system.
Obesity suppresses an important cellular process that prevents kidney
cell damage, according to a study appearing in an upcoming
issue of the
Journal of the American Society
of Nephrology (JASN).
In a new report appearing in the November 2016
issue of the
Journal of Leukocyte Biology, scientists show that nicotine activates certain white blood
cells, called neutrophils, which in turn release molecules that lead to increased inflammation.
The Stanford researchers, who report their results in the current
issue of the
Journal of Experimental Medicine, used a clever trick to shut off this damaging immune response: They engineered TH1
cells to produce IL - 4 instead
of their normal cytokines.
Using live imaging in zebrafish to track oligodendrocytes in real time, researchers reporting in the June 24
issue of the
Cell Press
journal Developmental
Cell discovered that individual oligodendrocytes coat neurons with myelin for only five hours after they are born.
This information, which is about to be tested experimentally, is now available to the scientific community through the most recent
issue of the specialized
journal Chemistry and Biology, part
of the
Cell group.
Two approaches to fat grafting — injection
of fat
cells versus fat - derived stem
cells — have similar effects in reversing the cellular - level signs
of aging skin, reports a study in the April
issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery ®, the official medical
journal of the American Society
of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).
The findings, which appear in an upcoming
issue of the
Journal of the American Society
of Nephrology (JASN), may have important public policy implications for genetic counseling for individuals with sickle
cell trait (SCT).
The study was published in the December
issue of Experimental Hematology, the official publication
of the Society for Hematology and Stem
Cells, and also highlighted in the
journal's editorial due to its significance in the biology and treatment
of blood cancer.