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“Researchers capture sun in a bottle” and “Engineered Listeria Bacteria become a potent new weapon against cancer.”

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Read: Researchers Capture Sun In A Bottle


 

Wild Parrots Sing Duets With Grammar Rules That Rival Human Language


 

In virtual reality, participants embodied an avatar whose left forearm was replaced by an autonomous prosthetic arm that flexed toward a target at different movement speeds.

To Feel Like Yours, A Prosthetic Must First Move Like Yours


 

The Listeria lifecycle after it infects a mammalian host. Counterclockwise from upper left, the bacteria are quickly ingested by an immune system cell called a macrophage, where they end up in an organ called the phagosome for digestion. But they escape the phagosome and enlist a protein called actin to build a needle-like protrusion and push it through the cell wall into a neighboring cell, starting the cycle over again. The Listeria strain used for cancer therapy is unable to co-opt actin and thus cannot infect other cells to cause illness.

Engineered Listeria Bacteria Becomes A Potent New Weapon Against Cancer


 

Josh Mitteldorf: Evidence For “Dark Energy” Challenged


 

 

Singapore’s First Shipwreck Carried A Record Haul Of China’s Rarest Porcelain


 

 

pear finch diagram

A Computational Trick Lets Scientists Refocus Holograms After They Have Already Been Recorded


 

 

Wolf Teeth Reveal A Hidden Cost Of Warmer Winters


 

HAL from 2001

When Chatbots Join The Delusion: How AI Can Hallucinate With Us, Not Just At Us


 

 

solar panel installation

Next-Gen Solar Panels Could Slash Billions Of Tonnes Of CO₂ From Their Own Manufacturing


 

woman grabbing her side

When Diabetes Comes For The Kidneys, Blood Chemistry Tells The Story First


 

 

a clock and dots connected by a wavy line, indicating how cells tell time

When Your Cells Fix Broken DNA Depends On The Time Of Day

 

 

 

 

 

 

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