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'Traffic controller' protein that protects DNA discovered, and it may help kill cancer cells
Mayo Clinic researchers have identified a protein that acts like a traffic controller for DNA, preventing damage during cell division—a discovery that could lead to new cancer therapies, according to ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Newly identified protein acts as a traffic controller for DNA replication
Mayo Clinic researchers have identified a protein that acts like a traffic controller for DNA, preventing damage during cell division - a discovery that could lead to new cancer therapies, according ...
New work shows that physical folding of the genome to control genes located far away may have been an early evolutionary development.
Steve Abel, an associate professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has spent more than a decade using computational and ...
Sepsis is a complex clinical syndrome characterized by dysregulated immune responses, systemic inflammation, and multi-organ dysfunction. It involves intricate interactions among multiple signaling ...
In this free webinar, learn how innovative long RNA manufacturing approaches can drive the development of next-generation RNA medicines. Attendees will ...
Visualizing and quantifying DNA replication dynamics in living human cells remains challenging. Here, a new super-resolution microscopy method, 3D-SPARK, maps changes in replication nanostructures in ...
Cells all require the transport of materials to maintain their function. In nerve cells, a tiny motor made of protein called KIF1A is responsible for that. Mutations in this protein can lead to ...
Targeted drug delivery is a powerful and promising area of medicine. Therapies that pinpoint the exact areas of the body where they're needed—and nowhere they're not—can reduce the medicine dosage and ...
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