ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Some deadly breast cancers share genetic features with ovarian tumors
- Researchers solve puzzle of B-cell lymphoma development
- Cancer research yields unexpected new way to produce nylon
- Constraining world trade is unlikely to help the climate, study finds
- Severe economic loss for European forest land expected by 2100
- New chemistry technique reproduces nature's elusive complexity
- Researchers develop editing toolkit for customizing zebrafish genomes
- Stratosphere targets deep sea to shape climate: North Atlantic 'Achilles heel' lets upper atmosphere affect the abyss
Some deadly breast cancers share genetic features with ovarian tumors Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:51 AM PDT The most comprehensive analysis yet of breast cancer shows that one of the most deadly subtypes is genetically more similar to ovarian tumors than to other breast cancers. The findings suggest that most basal-like breast tumors and ovarian tumors have similar genetic origins and potentially could be treated with the same drugs. |
Researchers solve puzzle of B-cell lymphoma development Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:51 AM PDT In germinal centers, immune cells learn to fight pathogens with high specificity. Researchers have now identified subpopulations of B cells at the germinal centers which express the proto-oncogene Myc (red). They showed that Myc is essential for the formation and maintenance of germinal centers. Their findings have implications for the pathogenesis of B-cell lymphomas. |
Cancer research yields unexpected new way to produce nylon Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:51 AM PDT In their quest for a cancer cure, researchers made a serendipitous discovery -- a molecule necessary for cheaper and greener ways to produce nylon. The finding arose from an intriguing notion that some of the genetic and chemical changes in cancer tumors might be harnessed for beneficial uses. |
Constraining world trade is unlikely to help the climate, study finds Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:50 AM PDT From rubber dinghies to television sets: the emissions of greenhouse gases in countries like China are to a significant extent caused by the production of goods that are exported to Germany or the United States. But this doesn't necessarily mean that Western countries have relocated their emission-intensive industries and hence escape regulation for climate protection, according to a new study. |
Severe economic loss for European forest land expected by 2100 Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:18 AM PDT By 2100 the climate change is expected to reduce the economic value of forest land by 14 to 50 percent, which equates to a potential damage of several hundred billion Euros unless effective countermeasures are taken. This is the conclusion of the first pan-European study on the economic effects of climate change on forest land. |
New chemistry technique reproduces nature's elusive complexity Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:18 AM PDT Scientists have shown how to synthesize in the laboratory an important set of natural compounds known as terpenes. The largest class of chemicals made by living organisms, terpenes are made within cells by some of the most complex chemical reactions found in biology. |
Researchers develop editing toolkit for customizing zebrafish genomes Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:12 AM PDT An international team of scientists has developed a highly-efficient means of editing zebrafish genomes for research purposes, eliminating a bottleneck that has stymied biomedical scientists from using the fish as a model for human disease. |
Posted: 23 Sep 2012 11:12 AM PDT A new study suggests something amazing: Periodic changes in winds high in the stratosphere influence the seas by striking a vulnerable "Achilles heel" in the North Atlantic and changing mile-deep ocean circulation patterns, which in turn affect Earth's climate. |
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