Not exact matches
In the
study,
published online
today by Science Translational Medicine, researchers removed breast tumors from
mice and placed biodegradable gels containing an immune - stimulating drug in the resulting empty space.
That's the tantalizing finding from a new
study published today that reveals a way that
mice — and potentially humans — can control the makeup and behavior of their gut microbiome.
The potential strategy — which targets metabolic pathways that are active only during intestinal inflammation — prevented or reduced inflammation in a
mouse model of colitis while exerting no obvious effect in control animals with healthy, balanced bacterial populations, said Dr. Sebastian Winter, Assistant Professor of Microbiology and co-corresponding author of the
study published online
today in Nature.
The
study, «Non-toxic metabolic management of metastatic cancer in VM
mice: novel combination of ketogenic diet, ketone supplementation, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy,» was
published online
today in PLOS ONE.
Molecules that protect the body from infection may be needed for
mice to socialize with their peers, according to a
study published today in Nature.
In the new
study,
published today in Science Advances, Charles Limoli, a molecular biologist at the University of California, Irvine, and colleagues took male
mice to a particle accelerator at the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory in Upton, New York.
The laboratory of Marcos Malumbres, who is head of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre's (CNIO) Cell Division & Cancer Group, working alongside Isabel Fariñas» team from the University of Valencia, shows, in a
study published today in the journal Nature Communications, how in
mice the elimination of the Cdh1 protein — a sub-unit of the APC / C complex, involved in the control of cell division — prevents cellular proliferation of rapidly dividing cells.
Thomas L. Kash, PhD, associate professor of pharmacology and the lead author of the
study published today in the journal Cell Reports, used
mice to show the effects of KORs on behavior.
Meanwhile, in a separate
study published today (June 5) in Molecular Cell, structural and protein biologist Shohei Koide from the University of Chicago, and his colleagues pinpoint a crucial protein - protein interaction that allows
mouse ESCs to differentiate.
Some of the leading folk in the cellular senescence research community
today published the results from a very encouraging life span
study, extending life in
mice via a method of removing senescent cells.
In the
study, which was
published online
today in the Annals of Neurology, the scientists reduced the level of the protein tau by genetically engineering Dravet
mouse models, «knocking out» the gene associated with tau production.
Long - term exercise appears to be beneficial for Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) like
mice, suggesting a potential of active physiotherapy for patient care; according to a
study published today in The Jo
In the
study, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers at UC San Francisco and
published today in the Journal of Neuroscience, scientists transplanted inhibitory neuron progenitors — early - stage brain cells that have the capacity to develop into mature inhibitory neurons — into two
mouse models of Alzheimer's disease, apoE4 or apoE4 with accumulation of amyloid beta, another major contributor to Alzheimer's.
Lack of oxygen during pregnancy combined with high salt intake in later life can damage vascular function in the offspring of
mice, according to a
study published today in The Journal of Physiology.
A large - scale
study,
published in Wellcome Open Research and which passed peer review
today, has shown that inactivating the same gene in
mouse embryos...