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National University of Science and Technology MISIS via Lab Manager
Scientists from NUST MISIS and colleagues from the University of Bayreuth, the University of Münster, the University of Chicago
and Linköping University have created nitrides, a material previously considered impossible to obtain. More amazing, they have shown that the material can be obtained using a very simple method of direct synthesis.
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News-Medical.net
According to study author Professor Antonio del Sol, the method has “great potential for regenerative medicine when it comes to replacing cell subpopulations that have been lost in the course of disease, for example.”
Together with colleagues from the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, the researchers showed that based on their computational predictions, stem cells in the brain could be reprogrammed and converted into another subtype of neurons.
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Streck
Understanding bacterial mechanisms that contribute to antimicrobial resistance is important for early detection of infections. β-lactamase production is the most frequent mechanism of resistance. Molecular classification of β-lactamases requires sequence determinations of either the gene encoding the enzyme or the amino acid sequence of the protein. Two Streck ARM-D® Kits detect 13 gene families and 450 allelic variants within β-lactamase and ampC families. The kits enable detection of antimicrobial resistance in the most accurate, fast and cost efficient manner. View Poster
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News-Medical.net
What do one in five breast cancers have in common? They all have large amounts of a protein called HER2.
"Every healthy cell produces a normal amount of HER2, but HER2 is produced 10 to 20 times more in a cancer cell," said Yehenew Agazie, an associate professor of biochemistry at the West Virginia University School of Medicine.
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www.mainestandards.com/Hemostasis or call 1-800-377-9684 for more information.
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University of Luxembourg via ScienceDaily
Thanks to a newly developed computational method, researchers can accurately predict how one subpopulation of cells can be converted into another.
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Laboratory Equipment
University of Guelph researchers have discovered the type of stem cell allowing geckos to create new brain cells, providing evidence that the lizards may also be able to regenerate parts of the brain after injury.
This finding could help in replacing human brain cells lost or damaged due to injury, aging or disease.
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Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University via Infection Control Today
The scientific group of Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University headed by professor Andrei Kozlov published the results of a study devoted to the search of solutions for creating the HIV vaccine.
During two years, with the support of the Russian Science Foundation's grant, researchers studied features of transmitted variants of HIV-1 virus.
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Medical News Today
New research finds that a gene previously thought to affect only a small percentage of Parkinson's disease cases actually affects many more. The findings mean that treatments that are being developed for a small number of people may, in fact, benefit many more.
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DARK Daily
For years, pathologists and dentists have recognized that the mouth contains many useful biomarkers for a wide range of health conditions and diseases. Now a study by a research team at Tufts University School of Engineering has demonstrated that a tooth-mounted sensor can reliably measure certain target markers.
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Is regenerative medicine the next big thing in Hematology testing?
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SeraSub® is a synthetic serum for use as a component in preparing standards and controls for in-vitro diagnostic tests. Learn more
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HealthDay News
Gene editing is no longer just fodder for sci-fi movies. Most Americans believe it's OK to tweak a baby's DNA under certain circumstances, a new poll finds.
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