News

Stanford researchers discovered that dialing down an overactive enzyme, LRRK2, can regrow lost cellular “antennae” in key ...
A new enzymatic process cuts costs by 74 percent, slashes chemical use, and recycles PET plastic cleaner than oil-based ...
The COVID pandemic illustrated how urgently we need antiviral medications capable of treating coronavirus infections. To aid ...
Organ-on-a-chip systems offer a more accurate, ethical, and scalable alternative to animal testing in drug discovery and ...
A new study has found that nourishment with vitamin C boosts epidermal thickness in lab-grown human skin models ... traced this cell proliferation to demethylation that appears to be mediated by ...
Inhibition of LKKR2 may rescue neurons that are dying due to a type of Parkinson’s disease that is caused by a single genetic ...
It's a huge step forward for the agriculture industry. Scientists make astonishing discovery that could protect food supply ...
The results of experiments in mice models were "astounding," said biochemist Suzanne Pfeffer of Stanford University.
Scientists found that vitamin C doesn't just protect skin from damage - it actually turns on sleeping genes that help make ...
Vitamin C fuels skin regeneration by unlocking genes that drive cell growth—making aging skin act young again.
The skin acts as the body's first line of defense against external threats. However, as we age, the epidermis—the outermost ...
As we age, our skin naturally becomes thinner and more fragile due to a decline in cell production. Now, researchers have ...