Science News
These Stunning 3D Images Reveal How a Massive Greenland Glacier Has Changed
Live Science - 2 Aug 2017 18:25Weird Worm-Lizard Creature Looks Like a Serpentine Centaur
Live Science - 2 Aug 2017 15:06Enormous exoplanet has an atmosphere hot enough to boil iron
New Scientist - 2 Aug 2017 23:42
A planet nearly double the size of Jupiter and 900 light years away has a glowing stratosphere and an atmosphere hot enough that iron there exists as a vapour
Marriage of microscopy techniques reveals 3D structure of critical protein complex
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 23:39
Researchers have solved the three-dimensional structure of a complex that is essential for the correct sorting of chromosomes into eggs and sperm during reproductive cell division or meiosis.
Collaboration between pet owners, vets and researchers helps dogs and children with a rare and severe epilepsy
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 23:39
New hope is being given to children who suffer from a rare and severe form of epilepsy, thanks to new, unique research.
Autism may reflect excitation-inhibition imbalance in brain, study finds
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 23:25
Key features of autism reflect an imbalance in signaling from excitatory and inhibitory neurons in a portion of the forebrain, and that reversing the imbalance could alleviate some of its hallmark symptoms, explain resea...
ONC201 may inhibit cancer stem cell self-renewals by altering their gene expression
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 23:25
ONC201 may inhibit cancer stem cell self-renewals by altering their gene expression, according to a new study.
Ebola detected in semen of survivors two years after infection
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 23:25
Researchers have found Ebola RNA in the semen of survivors two years after infection. They are calling on the World Health Organization to update its guidelines on sexual transmission.
Early gene-editing success holds promise for preventing inherited diseases
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 22:28
Scientists have, for the first time, corrected a disease-causing mutation in early stage human embryos with gene editing. The technique, which uses the CRISPR-Cas9 system, corrected the mutation for a heart condition at ...
The renewables reality: clean energy hasn't risen for 25 years
New Scientist - 2 Aug 2017 22:00
Big countries are already cutting back on support for solar and wind. They should be doing the opposite, or else the renewable revolution will falter
First results from US CRISPR gene editing on human embryos
New Scientist - 2 Aug 2017 22:00
The revolutionary CRISPR genome editing technique could be used safely to prevent some genetic diseases, according to the first embryo study conducted in the US
Protein involved in Alzheimer's disease may also be implicated in cognitive abilities
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 21:48
Rare mutations in the amyloid precursor protein (APP) have previously been shown to be strongly associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD).
A Braf kinase-inactive mutant induces lung adenocarcinoma
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 21:47
The initiating oncogenic event in half of human lung adenocarcinomas is still unknown, a fact that complicates the development of selective targeted therapies. Researchers have demonstrated that the expression of an endo...
Three Klebsiella species cause life-threatening infections and share drug resistance genes
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 21:47
Three different species of Klebsiella bacteria can cause life-threatening infections in hospital patients and that all three share genes that confer resistance to the most commonly used antibiotics, new research shows. T...
Comprehensive sequencing program shows promise of precision medicine for advanced cancer
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 21:47
A new study shows just how complex metastatic cancer is and offers some clues to attacking it. The study represents one of the largest and most comprehensive efforts to examine the genetic and molecular landscape of adva...
Good cellular neighbors combat incipient cancers
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 21:47
Scientists have spent decades studying the nature of tumor cells, but few have looked to see what was happening in the surrounding tissue. When researchers took a closer look at skin cells, they discovered the unaffected...
Researchers get better at tweaking the genomes of human embryos
The Economist - 2 Aug 2017 21:16
IT IS risky to predict who and what will win a Nobel prize. But some discoveries are so big that their receipt of science's glitziest gong seems only a matter of time. One such is CRISPR-Cas9, a powerful gene-editing tec...
'Perfect liquid' quark-gluon plasma is the most vortical fluid
Phys.org - 2 Aug 2017 21:00
Particle collisions recreating the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) that filled the early universe reveal that droplets of this primordial soup swirl far faster than any other fluid. The new analysis of data from the Relativisti...
How to strip 99 per cent of harmful BPA from water in 30 minutes
New Scientist - 2 Aug 2017 21:00
BPA has been linked to a range of health problems, but after decades of research, there's now a cheap way to remove almost all of it from contaminated water
Catalysts efficiently and rapidly remove BPA from water
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 20:06
Chemists have developed an approach that quickly and cheaply removes more than 99 percent of bisphenol A (BPA) from water. BPA, a ubiquitous and dangerous chemical used in the manufacturing of many plastics, is found in ...
Neurobiology: Use it or lose it
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 20:06
A new study reveals that sound-evoked activity of neurons in the auditory system of the mouse increases the thickness of their myelin sheaths -- and enhances the speed of signal transmission -- both during development an...
Bone loss after denosumab, only partial protection with zoledronate
Science Daily - 2 Aug 2017 20:06
To counter the decline in BMD after denosumab treatment is discontinued, osteoporosis patients may be transitioned from denosumab to other anti-resorptives. This report investigates whether a single infusion of zoledrona...