
The back-scattering interferometer uses a red-light laser identical to those used in grocery store scanners. When biological molecules kiss, a new kind of biosensor can tell.
| Biotechnology | September 20, 2007 11:14 PM |

The back-scattering interferometer uses a red-light laser identical to those used in grocery store scanners. When biological molecules kiss, a new kind of biosensor can tell.
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| Biology | September 20, 2007 10:14 PM |
An international team of researchers led by the Smithsonian Institution has completed a new study on Homo floresiensis, commonly referred to as the “hobbit,” a 3-foot-tall, 18,000-year-old hominin skeleton, discovered four years ago on the Indonesian island of Flores. This study offers one of the most striking confirmations of the original interpretation of the hobbit as an island remnant of one of the oldest human migrations to Asia. The research is being published in the Sept. 21 issue of Science.
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| Molecular & Cell Biology | September 20, 2007 09:14 PM |
A Jekyll-Hyde mechanism that both protects healthy cells and enables cancer cells could be the basis for new cancer-fighting drugs.
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| Biotechnology | September 20, 2007 08:14 PM |
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine have demonstrated the potential of a new strategy for genetic modification of large animals. The method employs a harmless gene therapy virus that transfers a genetic modification to male reproductive cells, which is then passed naturally on to offspring.
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| Molecular & Cell Biology | September 20, 2007 07:14 PM |
Two years ago, Brown University researchers discovered something startling: Decrease the activity of the cancer-suppressing protein p53 and you can make fruit flies live significantly longer.
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| Biology | September 20, 2007 01:11 PM |
Researchers have discovered that even the gruesome and brutal lifestyle of the Evarcha culicivora, a blood gorging jumping spider indigenous to East Africa, can’t help but be tempted by that ‘big is beautiful’ mantra no matter what the costs. A study recently published in Ethology found that despite the inherent risk of sexual cannibalism, virgin females were attracted to bigger males when losing their virginity before opting for the safer smaller male as a longer term mate choice.
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| Microbiology | September 20, 2007 01:11 PM |
The influenza A virus does not lie dormant during summer but migrates globally and mixes with other viral strains before returning to the Northern Hemisphere as a genetically different virus, according to biologists who say the finding settles a key debate on what the virus does during the summer off season when it is not infecting people.
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| Molecular & Cell Biology | September 20, 2007 10:15 AM |
University of Nevada, Reno researchers Jeanne and David Zeh of the Department of Biology have received a five-year, $650,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to investigate the effects of natural mitochondrial variation on sperm traits and sperm competitive ability.
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