Cancer is caused by faulty genes, but what also shapes a cancer cell's behavior is how a gene's instructions are trimmed and ...
For five decades, scientists have known about a notorious cancer-causing enzyme called SRC. But they always assumed it only ...
HeLa cells are the most famous human cells in science. Discover how cervical cancer, HPV proteins, and bioethics shaped one ...
Pancreatic cancer cells can regulate their tolerance to chemotherapy depending on what they detect in their surroundings, according to NYU Langone researchers. With that, it’s unlikely that a single ...
A new study led by researchers at Adelaide University and published in Science Advances reveals why some cancers can grow and survive in the body, while others cannot. It turns out that intense ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. Universal, off‑the‑shelf CAR‑T cell therapies using gene‑edited donor T cells are beginning ...
A research team led by Albert Einstein College of Medicine scientists has developed a new strategy to engineer immune cells ...
In order to reprogram readily available cells into specific immune cells that fight various diseases, one must know the "recipe" for the transformation. Researchers at Lund University have now created ...
Tarlatamab is a bispecific T-cell engager (BiTE) that binds to delta-like ligand-3 (DLL3) on small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cells and cluster of differentiation-3 on T cells, thereby delivering ...
The Y chromosome is among the smallest in the human body and carries the fewest genes. Researchers are paying renewed attention to its role in cancer—specifically, what happens when it vanishes.
A hidden clue may explain why some mutated cells become cancerous and others don’t: how fast they divide. A new study from researchers at Sinai Health in Toronto reveals that the total time it takes ...