The Brighterside of News on MSN
New study provides a key breakthrough in cancer therapy and synthetic biology
Randomness inside cells can decide whether a cancer returns after chemotherapy or whether an infection survives antibiotics.
Professor Saeema Ahmed-Kristensen is a leading design engineering scholar and Associate Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Research & Impact) at the University of Exeter, where she also serves as Director of the ...
Researchers test low-cost methylene blue and blood biomarkers to detect cerebral malaria early and reduce brain injury, ...
In the International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing, researchers fabricate 3D hydrogel-based biomimetic Turing nanowrinkled ...
Scientists have taken a major step toward improving how wastewater treatment systems deal with emerging contaminants such as ...
The "Selecting the Best Scientific Journal for Your Research Training Course (Apr 13, 2026)" training has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. This session offers a detailed guide to ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
'Fart gas' linked to memory loss and Alzheimer’s-like brain damage, study finds
Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine, led by Bindu Paul, an associate professor of pharmacology, psychiatry and neuroscience ...
Large wild mammals—from elephants to antelopes—are already struggling to cope with global warming. Now new research shows ...
Scientists are tracing ancient helium trapped beneath South Africa’s gold fields, revealing how rare gas survives for ...
African striped mice are used to desert conditions but are showing dehydration as climate change heats up their environment.
Morning Overview on MSN
A new “in-between” state blurs the line between alive and not alive
For generations, biology textbooks treated life and death as a clean binary: an organism was either functioning or finished.
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