One of the most fundamental processes in all of biology is the spontaneous organization of cells into clusters that divide and eventually turn into shapes—be they organs, wings or limbs. Subscribe to ...
Before a cell can divide, it has to precisely duplicate its entire genetic information. However, the DNA in the cell exists ...
(A) Schematic of the experimental design and analysis. Paracancerous and cancer tissues obtained from surgically resected DLBCLs were split and processed for scRNA-seq and spatial transcriptomics. (B) ...
Mount Sinai researchers have published the first organ-wide human skin spatial atlas from across the body. It provides an ...
A new imaging approach is shedding light on one of cell biology’s most elusive questions: how lipids are organized and sorted within membranes.
Scientists have uncovered a surprising secret about our DNA: it’s not a static blueprint, but a constantly shifting, folding ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New method maps cell membrane lipids in 3D at nanoscale resolution
A set of new imaging tools now allows researchers to see how specific fat molecules, called phospholipids, are distributed ...
When cells experience enough chronic stress, they can stop dividing permanently. In this state of cellular limbo, known as replicative senescence, cells remain alive but no longer proliferate.
Tooth root development relies on precise coordination of cellular signals, yet the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Researchers have uncovered how two proteins, Gli2 and Gli3, work together to ...
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