Daily non-political popular news in brief.
Scientists publish a photo gallery of the diseases threatening Christmas dinner
01-08-2007 · University of BathThe scientists who help ensure that only disease-free vegetables make it onto our dinner plates have published a photo gallery of some of the fungi, bacteria and viruses that routinely threaten the traditional Christmas dinner.
Read more »
Keywords: scientists, publish, photo, gallery, diseases, threatening, christmas, dinner, scientist, disease, christma
« Previous | Next »
Similar news on "Scientists publish a photo gallery of the diseases threatening Christmas dinner":
- Scientists publish a photo gallery of the diseases threatening Christmas dinner
12-22-2006 · University of Bath
The scientists who help ensure that only disease-free vegetables make it onto our dinner plates have published a photo gallery of some of the fungi, bacteria and viruses that routinely threaten the traditional Christmas dinner.
Similar news · Read more »
- Scientists publish a photo gallery of the diseases threatening Christmas dinner
01-02-2007 · University of Bath
The scientists who help ensure that only disease-free vegetables make it onto our dinner plates have published a photo gallery of some of the fungi, bacteria and viruses that routinely threaten the traditional Christmas dinner.
Similar news · Read more »
- Finding that 1-in-a-billion that could lead to disease
08-19-2007 · EurekAlert!
Errors in the genetic code can give rise to cancer and a host of other diseases, but finding these errors can be more difficult than looking for the proverbial needle in the haystack. Now, scientists at Johns Hopkins have uncovered how the tiny protein-machines in cells tasked to search for such potentially life-threatening genetic damage actually recognize DNA errors.
Similar news · Read more »
- Scientists discover novel way to remove iron from ferritin
11-02-2007 · EurekAlert!
A new study led by Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute senior scientist, Elizabeth Theil, PhD, is the first to suggest that a small protein or heptapeptide could be used to accelerate the removal of iron from ferritin. The results of this study may help scientists develop new medications that dramatically improve the removal of excess iron in patients diagnosed with blood diseases such as B-Thalassemia (Cooley's anemia) or sickle cell disease.
Similar news · Read more »
- MRSA toxin acquitted: Study clears suspected key to severe bacterial illness
11-06-2006 · EurekAlert!
Researchers who thought they had identified the bacterial perpetrator of the often severe disease caused by community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) had better keep looking: Scientists at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, have exonerated a toxin widely thought to be the guilty party.
Similar news · Read more »
- Rhesus macaque genome may hold clues for human health and evolution
04-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
An international consortium of scientists has completed a draft sequence of the rhesus macaque genome, a species of non-human primate widely used for creating models of human diseases and infections. The study paves the way for researchers to watch disease progression at the genetic level in macaques, a close relative of humans. The findings, which appear April 13 in the journal Science, will let us learn how humans and other primates evolved into distinct species.
Similar news · Read more »
- Protein protects brain against compound in lead poisoning, liver disease
12-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
Scientists have discovered that a protein known as PEPT2 protects the brains of mice from a naturally occurring but potentially toxic compound present in lead poisoning and in a class of liver diseases that can cause serious neurological complications.
Similar news · Read more »
- U-M scientists develop tool to probe role of oxidative stress in aging, disease
02-15-2008 · EurekAlert!
Oxygen, although essential for human life, can turn into an aggressive chemical that is outright toxic to important molecules inside our cells. This "oxidative stress" is associated with many diseases, such as Alzheimer's, heart disease and cancer, and has been suggested to be the culprit underlying aging.
Similar news · Read more »
- Scientists find gene target that may protect against Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis
10-26-2006 · EurekAlert!
According to one of the Canadian principal investigators, director of the Laboratory in Genetics and Genomic Medicine of Inflammation at the Montreal Heart Institute, Dr. John D. Rioux, "This discovery may lead to a paradigm shift in our thinking from 'genetics of diseases to genetics of health,' particularly as concerns Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis."
Similar news · Read more »
- Scientists learn the origin of rogue B cells
02-07-2007 · EurekAlert!
Doctors have long wondered why, in some people, the immune system turns against parts of the body it is designed to protect, leading to autoimmune disease. Now, researchers at the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, in collaboration with the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, have provided some new clues into one likely factor: the early development of immune system cells called B cells.
Similar news · Read more »