Immune cells called B cells make antibodies that fight off invading bacteria, viruses and other foreign substances. During their preparation for this battle, B cells transiently revert to a more ...
Researchers have found evidence of nuclear metabolic enzymes for the first time, contributing to our understanding of cancer growth.
Uncovering the mystery of why individuals born with mutations in the gene that encodes HSL—the cytosolic enzyme that releases energy from fat—lose fat instead of gaining it, Dominique Langin, PhD, ...
Michael Rout has spent decades studying the molecular machinery that controls all traffic in and out of the cell’s nucleus.
Cancer cells are notoriously flexible, taking on new features as they move around the body. Many of these changes are due to epigenetic modifications, which influence how DNA is packaged, and not due ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results