Interesting Engineering on MSN
Biocomputers: Scientists are turning human brain cells into functional computers
A biocomputer harnesses biologically derived materials, such as DNA, proteins, or living tissue (e.g., lab-grown neurons), to ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists repair and recharge human cells with donated mitochondria
Scientists are learning how to revive faltering human cells by loading them with fresh power plants, effectively repairing ...
6don MSN
The Rise Of ‘Organoid Intelligence’: Why Scientists Are Now Growing Computers From Human Brain Cells
Researchers are turning human brain cells into tiny biocomputers. Here’s what the tech can actually do, what’s hype, and the ...
Putting pig organs in people is OK in the US, but growing human organs in pigs is not – why is that?
If a pig embryo infused with human cells truly became something close enough to count as a member of the human species, then ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
A single protein decides when human cells grow old, study finds
Cells are not immortal, and that is a good thing. After a certain number of divisions, many human cells stop multiplying for ...
Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the bladder is a distinct and rarer form, accounting for approximately 2% to 5% of all bladder cancers in the U.S. It develops in the flat, thin squamous cells that ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Researchers uncover how a key transcription factor reads DNA in human cells
With a new study in the journal Cell, researchers at Stanford University and Stockholm University have contributed to ...
Why do nerve cells die in dementia - and can this process be slowed down? Researchers from the Technical University of Munich ...
Your skin is in a constant state of reinvention. Every month, your body sheds and regenerates its entire outer layer—a ...
Researchers at Stanford found a way to cure or prevent Type 1 diabetes in mice using a combined blood stem cell and islet ...
6don MSN
Sneaky senescent cells that resist cancer treatment can provide druggable lung cancer target
Senescent fibroblasts are aging cells that no longer divide and protect against tumor development. Yet two decades have gone ...
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