In experiments, researchers showed that the disease-spreading insects couldn’t resist the sweet smell of a fungus that infected and killed them.
The University of Kansas houses the world’s largest bee research collection, with more than half a million specimens, including parasitic “vampire bees,” iridescent orchid bees, and a rediscovered gia ...
Antibiotics have been the workhorses of modern medicine, but their success has fueled a dangerous rise in drug-resistant ...
This study presents valuable findings on the role of KLF6 in in vitro endothelial cells exposed to altered (high or low) shear stress with a customized microfluidic device to investigate mechanisms of ...
Ramona’s Vireo platform is recognized in the 2025 Top Innovations Startup category for its unique multi-camera microscope ...
Ribosomes are the cell's protein factories, which read the genetic code and assemble the proteins that every organism needs to live. But as far as how ribosomes themselves were formed, tantalizingly ...
The humble henna plant, famed for its vibrant dye, could hold the key to healing scarred livers. In a new study, researchers have found that its active compound, lawsone, may stop and even reverse ...
Funds for a new $220 million Biology Teaching and Research Building, or BTRB, were approved by the Texas A&M Board of Regents ...
The human body relies on precise genetic instructions to function, and cancer begins when these instructions get scrambled.
The human body relies on precise genetic instructions to function, and cancer begins when these instructions get scrambled.
Researchers have developed an AI-assisted technology that can identify and tag chromosomal abnormalities in cells.
The parasite that causes the deadly disease malaria is full of tiny crystals that constantly spin—a mystery for decades. New ...
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