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Safety Concerns After Nicotine Concentrations Measured in Popular E-Cigarette
The nicotine found in JUUL products is currently, on average, about 61 milligrams per milliliter of fluid in pods—equivalent to more than one pack of conventional cigarettes.
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Researchers Discover Thousands of Genes Essential for Cancer’s Survival
Researchers have discovered thousands of genes essential for cancer’s survival and ranked which ones show the most promise as drug targets for developing new treatments.
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Exercise Promotes Spinal Cord Healing in Rodents via Epigenetic Mechanism
Providing rodents with more space, an exercise wheel, toys and company before an injury helped to ‘prime’ their cells, making it more likely their damaged nerves would regenerate following spinal injury.
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Team Receive Funding to Investigate How Opioid Use Is Treated in Adolescence
A Penn State researcher and his team will receive over $1.8 million over three years from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to investigate how opioid use is treated in adolescence.
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Experimental Drug Delivers One-Two Punch to Vision Loss
In studies with lab-grown human cells and in mice, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers have found that an experimental drug may be twice as good at fighting vision loss as previously thought.
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Cancer: Central Role of Cell “Skeleton” Revealed
All cells possess a cytoskeleton which allows them to move and maintain their shape. Scientists recently showed that a part of this cytoskeleton called branched actin is also essential to cell proliferation: this actin transmits information to cells on whether they should proliferate. If the necessary conditions are not met, these actin fibres are not synthesized, and the cell does not divide – except in the case of cancerous cells, which can override this control mechanism.
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Spying on Cells' Eating Habits Could Aid Cancer Diagnosis
Scientists have developed a new imaging technology to visualize what cells eat, which could aid the diagnosis and treatment of diseases such as cancer.
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Kelp Is at Hand: A Treasure Trove of New Drugs Underwater
A new study reveals for the first time that a common species of seaweed, Laminaria ochroleuca, is a rich source of bacteria with antimicrobial and anticancer activities, and potential new drug candidates.
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"Hit-and-run" Interaction May Trigger Cell Death
A ‘hit-and-run’ interaction between two proteins could be an important trigger for cell death.
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Mapping Tumor Immune Cell Populations Points to Immunotherapy Targets
Tumors are a complex mixture of many different cell types, including immune cells known collectively as tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells. These cells represent alternative targets for immunotherapy, but their role in tumors is still poorly understood. To shed light on this under-examined family of immune cells, researchers used single-cell sequencing to map the landscape of myeloid cells in tumors from patients with lung cancer.
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