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Immunocore Appoints Dr Eliot Forster as Chief Executive Officer
Immunocore Limited has announced the appointment of Dr Eliot Forster as Chief Executive Officer with immediate effect.
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WuXi Acquires NextCODE Health
NextCODE and WuXi's Genome Center will offer comprehensive clinical, research, and diagnostic testing products and services worldwide.
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£15m Initiative Puts Scotland at Forefront of Gene-Led Healthcare
Initiative sees the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow partner with Illumina.
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Pharmaceuticals, Personal Care Products Could Taint Swimming Pools
A new study suggests pharmaceuticals and chemicals from personal care products end up in swimming pools, possibly interacting with chlorine to produce disinfection byproducts with unknown properties and health effects.
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Assessing Tumors During Surgery
A novel biomarker for mutant p53 could help pathologists assessing tumors during surgery.
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This Week on NeuroScientistNews: 05 January – 09 January
The gut-brain connection; predicting future behavior; brain differences in bipolar disorder and more.
♦ Researchers map direct gut-brain connection.
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Proteros Enters into a Collaboration with Bayer
Collaboration to develop new cardiovascular drug compounds for an integral membrane protein.
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Study identifies two genes that boost risk for PTSD
Finding could lead to faster diagnosis, better treatment for survivors
Why do some people develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while others who suffered the same ordeal do not? A new University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) discovery may shed light on the answer.
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Neuroprosthetics for paralysis: A new implant on the spinal cord
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) scientists have managed to get rats walking on their own again using a combination of electrical and chemical stimulation. But applying this method to humans would require multifunctional implants that could be installed for long periods of time on the spinal cord without causing any tissue damage.
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Ritual circumcision linked to increased risk of autism in young boys
Research published January 8 by the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine suggests that circumcised boys are more likely than intact boys to develop autism spectrum disorder (ASD) before the age of 10.
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