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Grumpy Grandparents Show Protection Against Alzheimer's
Using brain imaging, researchers have shown that elderly people with low agreeableness could be better protected against Alzheimer’s disease.
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Researchers Target Amyloid Fibrils With Gold Nanoparticles
Scientists have used gold nanoparticles in combination with cryogenic transmission electron microscopy to provide rapid and unprecedented images of amyloid fibrils.
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Polar Ice Losses Six-Fold Worse Than in the 1990s
Greenland and Antarctica are losing ice faster than in the 1990s and are both tracking the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s worst-case climate warming scenario.
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It's Raining Iron!
Thanks to a new instrument, researchers have observed a giant exoplanet featuring iron rain and has an ultra-hot day side with temperatures rising above 2,400°C, high enough to vaporize metals.
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The Immune System Attacks Tumors Remotely
Scientists from the Institut Pasteur and Inserm described the spatiotemporal activity of tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes – locally and remotely.
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Starving Cancer Cells to Death With Statins
In experiments with human cells in the laboratory, researchers have added to growing evidence that statins may kill cancer cells and have uncovered clues to how they do it.
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Bye-bye to "Forever" Chemicals?
Modeling experiments looking to destroy persistent contaminants have shown that using excess electrons shatter the carbon-fluorine bond of PFAS, a problem contaminant of water sources.
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Recycling Key for Microbial Life in the Deep Ocean
Researchers have revealed how recycling and metabolic flexibility are the key to how microorganisms can survive deep beneath the ocean floor.
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Happy Microbes, Healthy Soil
A new study explores the different roles of various soil microbes in soil’s nitrogen cycle and how they make nutrients available to plants.
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How Diet Can Impact Multiple Sclerosis Progression
Short-chain fatty acids stemming from the diet could influence immune regulation in people with multiple sclerosis, which in turn may impact disease progression, according to researchers.
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