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Information Today May 14, 2015 |
NPG Announces Spinal Cord Journal Nature Publishing Group introduced a quarterly, online-only journal, Spinal Cord Series and Cases, in collaboration with the International Spinal Cord Society. |
Chemistry World May 13, 2015 Stephen McCarthy |
Venoms to drugs: venom as a source for the development of human therapeutics The book is well-constructed, starting with an overview of the evolutionary origins of venoms and how these relate to common structures, followed by a guide to modern bioinformatics methods and their application to research in this field. |
Fast Company June 2015 |
Meet Ebola's Soft-Spoken, Plant-Loving Arch Nemesis A professor at Arizona State University, Arntzen is considered the godfather of a growing field of research sometimes called "pharming": engineering plants to produce specialized vaccines and other drugs. |
Chemistry World May 11, 2015 Jack Busby |
Terpene analogues bear safer pesticides Tweaking the natural substrates of terpene synthase enzymes could lead to less toxic pesticides and swathes of other important biologically-active compounds, according to UK researchers. |
Chemistry World May 8, 2015 Matthew Gunther |
Gold-plated onion shows its strength as artificial muscle Producing many a tear in the kitchen, onions may now add some flavor to the robotics community as scientists in Taiwan have created an artificial muscle made from gold-plated onion skin. |
Chemistry World May 7, 2015 Tim Wogan |
Carnivorous plant adhesive helps cells stick The adhesive used by carnivorous sundew plants to trap insects may one day find use as a cell-friendly scaffold in tissue engineering, researchers in the US have shown. |
Chemistry World May 7, 2015 Jonathan Kitley |
Light years: the extraordinary story of mankind's fascination with light In what is an extremely readable popular science book, Brian Clegg details the history of mankind's understanding of light. |
Information Today May 7, 2015 |
PCG Will Promote Japanese Medical Database PCG will help Japanese medical publisher Meteo to facilitate the expansion of Meteo's Medical*Online-E information service into North and South America. |
Fast Company David Lumb |
Apple Is Planning iPhone Apps That Let You Share Your DNA Down the line, these apps could let users share their DNA data just like iPhone users share their locations now, says MIT Technology Review. |
Chemistry World May 6, 2015 Matthew Gunther |
Zombie cells may rise up to kill infections The worst fears of Hollywood may yet become a reality as chemists in Israel have found dead bacteria, killed with silver, may be able rise up like 'zombies' and go on to kill surviving pathogens. |
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