Corporate Banner
Satellite Banner
Technology Networks Header
Thursday, May 23, 2013
 
Register | Sign in
Home Page
  News
Return

Scientists Find Calcium is the Initial Trigger in our Immune Response to Healing

Published: Thursday, February 14, 2013
Last Updated: Thursday, February 14, 2013
Bookmark and Share
The findings, published in Current Biology, could lead to new therapies that speed up the healing process following injury or surgery.

Full access to this article is for registered users only.
Registration is free-of-charge and allows access to all content on our web communities.

Already registered? Then please log in at the top of the page.

Print Page

Scientific News
Infection Makes Mosquitoes Immune to Malaria Parasites
Study highlights the potential of using Wolbachia in malaria control.
Taming Suspect Gene Reverses Schizophrenia-like Abnormalities in Mice
NIH-funded study raises hope for recovery of some adult patients, despite early damage.
Clues to Congenital Heart Disease
Non-inherited mutations in hundreds of genes together account for about 1 in 10 cases of severe congenital heart defects.
New DNA Cattle Test Beefs up Dairy and Meat Quality
A genomics technique developed at Cornell to improve corn can now be used to improve the quality of milk and meat.
ATARiS Informatics Platform Hits the Jackpot
ATARiS is one of several tools developed at the Broad Institute to precisely tune in to the signals within noisy datasets.
100K Pathogen Genome Project Maps First Genomes
UC project announced that it has sequenced the genomes of its first 10 infectious microorganisms, including strains of Salmonella and Listeria.
Unkempt Weedy Land Unintentionally Boosts Wildlife
Parts of the farm landscape that look overgrown and ‘scruffy’ are more important than they first appear in supporting wildlife.
New Software Spots, Isolates Cyber-attacks to Protect Networked Control Systems
Software algorithm detects and isolates cyber-attacks on networked control systems that are becoming increasingly important to national infrastructure
Computational Tool Translates Complex Data into 2-Dimensional Images
May allow doctors to track progression of cancer, response to treatment, and risk of relapse.
Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research to Celebrate 15 Years
A program that fosters basic science projects of potentially high impact is celebrating 15 years of discovery at UC San Francisco.
Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Skyscraper Banner
Skyscraper Banner
Follow TechNetcom1 on Twitter
Technology Networks Ltd. on LinkedIn
Get The App
Go to LabTube.tv
Go to ePosters.net