Macrophages, the immune system’s front-line scavenger cells, do more than simply digest dead cells. A new study published in ...
In new research, scientists at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, in collaboration with ...
Scientists have developed a method to reprogram cancer-fighting immune cells directly inside the body, potentially ...
Cells aren’t as passive as scientists once thought—they actively create internal currents to move proteins quickly and ...
Brain immune cells may be responsible for the formation of Alzheimer's plaques, revealing a key turning point in this neurological disease.
A German University has explained how each and every one of our individual cells have an internal alarm system that reacts to ...
Every human born on this planet is not entirely themselves. A tiny fraction of our cells – around one in a million – is actually not our own, but comes from our mothers. That means each of us has ...
Within tumors in the human body, there are immune cells (macrophages) capable of fighting cancer, but they have been unable to perform their roles properly due to suppression by the tumor. KAIST ...
Illustration of a T lymphocyte white blood cell, depicted in blue, attacking a cancer cell, shown in red Nemes Laszlo / Science Photo Library via Getty Images CAR T-cell therapy can be a lifesaving ...
Scientists have developed a new class of microscopic antibody fragments capable of functioning inside human cells, overcoming a long-standing limitation in biomedical science.
In a recently published study, researchers at Fox Chase Cancer Center revealed for the first time that cancer cells can evade anti-cancer drugs by entering and surviving within bone marrow fibroblasts ...