Understanding why newborns, but not adults, can regenerate the heart could lead to treatments that "reprogram" adult macrophages.
Newborns with heart complications can rely on their newly developed immune systems to regenerate cardiac tissues, but adults aren't so lucky.
If you were old enough to watch the news or read the paper back in the late 1990s, you very likely remember Dolly, the cloned sheep. Born in 1996, the researchers responsible for cloning her kept it ...
An innovative organoid model mirrors the pancreas' complexity, generating all three key cell types to explore development and ...
A team of researchers from the Keck School of Medicine of USC has unlocked the details of a cellular pathway that triggers cellular inflammation and aging and is linked to Alzheimer's disease, ...
Bristol Myers Squibb's FDA nod for Breyanzi (liso-cel) in relapsed/refractory CLL/SLL boosts its CAR T-cell portfolio, ...
New research has investigated the mechanism by which bivalency functions to poise genes for expression during cell differentiation, providing insight into a long-standing paradigm in the regulation of ...
Researchers will explore a promising approach for treating degenerative diseases by replacing damaged cells with new ones and ...
Scientist Sarallah Rezazadeh from the Icahn School of Medicine explores the molecular mechanisms behind adult stem cells as ...
A mouse with two dads — or a bi-paternal mouse — has made it to adulthood. Several mice, in fact. As detailed in a study published in the journal Cell Stem Cell, scientists achieved this feat of ...
Scientists achieved a breakthrough enabling two men to have offspring without a biological mother, using genetic engineering ...
Researchers created the first bi-paternal mouse by modifying imprinting genes, advancing reproductive science but facing ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results