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A Better Way To Differentiate Amino Acids?
Researchers have developed the foundation for direct sequencing of individual proteins.
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Revealing Anxiety at the Molecular Level
Researchers have uncovered nearly 209 genes whose activity can change in anxiety, which may provide new targets for drug development.
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CBT for Social Anxiety May Protect Against Cellular Aging
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) for patients with social anxiety not only helps to reduce anxiety levels but also seems to protect against accelerated cellular aging, a study involving researchers at Karolinska Institutet published in the journal Translational Psychiatry reports.
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Why Do Fatty Meals Disrupt the Gut’s Communication With the Body?
A high-fat meal can silence communication between the intestine and the rest of the body, according to a new Duke University study in zebrafish.
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Solving the Mysteries of Autoimmune Disease
IgG4-related disease is an autoimmune disorder affecting millions with no established cure. Previous research indicates that T cells and the immunoglobulin IgG4 itself are key causative factors, but the mechanism of action of these components is unclear. But recent research has brought to light new targets for therapy.
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Gene Expression Data Is Being Widely Misinterpreted
New research by a Tel Aviv University group identifies a frequent technical bias in data generated by RNA-seq technology, which often leads to false results.
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How the Skin Senses Irritation
A new University of Oklahoma study could have implications on our understanding of how certain sensory signals are transmitted through the body.
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When Cells Cycle Fast, Cancer Gets a Jumpstart
Yale researchers have identified another bit of cellular chicanery that jumpstarts cancer. In at least one form of blood cancer, cells with cancer-causing gene lesions can remain normal and healthy — until cell division, or cycling, speeds up.
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How Cells Muster and March Out
Researchers have developed a mathematical model that describes, for the first time, how single-cell migration can come together into coordinated movements of groups of cells.
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Team Reveals Why Certain Melanoma Cells Are More Likely To Spread
A research team from the Children’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern (CRI) has discovered why certain melanoma cells are more likely to spread through the body.
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