Vitamin B1, also known as thiamine, is essential for the survival of our cells. The human body can't produce it, but we can ...
For the first time, researchers have created a single cell atlas of prenatal human skin to understand how skin forms, and ...
To understand how these large snakes can regenerate their intestines without intestinal crypts, scientists sequenced the RNA genes of pythons. By learning more about this process in reptiles, ...
Prenatal skin atlas and hair-growing skin organoids could inform on new approaches to enable scarless wound healing or ...
Prenatal human skin atlas and organoid will accelerate research into congenital diseases and lead to clinical applications ...
When paternal mitochondria aren’t eliminated as they should be, it can lead to negative health consequences—and new research ...
Viruses are masters of stealth. From the moment a virus enters the host's body, it begins hijacking its cells. First, the ...
Researchers have for the first time created a single "cell atlas" of prenatal human skin to understand how skin forms.
For the first time, researchers have created a single cell atlas of prenatal human skin to understand how skin forms, and what goes wrong in disease.
Researchers have for the first time created a single "cell atlas" of prenatal human skin to understand how skin forms.
EMBL Hamburg and CSSB scientists have uncovered the molecular details of how we absorb vitamin B1, paving the way to ...