Evolution in ejaculation and curing HIV
29 November, 2013 | Samuel Winthrop |
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What's driving the competition? A study into the molecular evolution of the ejaculate in humans & their relatives. https://t.co/ld7m60Umxw
— F1000Prime (@F1000) November 27, 2013
Cured of HIV? An infected baby treated with ART 30 hours after birth showed no signs of the virus 30 months later. https://t.co/JrUWizSV9g
— F1000Prime (@F1000) November 28, 2013
Could doctors soon use fluorescent marker-carrying 'nanoworms' to report on thrombin activity in vivo? https://t.co/1R4luGofuE
— F1000Prime (@F1000) November 27, 2013
While elsewhere on Twitter…
Is science publishing like a game of battleships, where we cherry-pick only publish 'hits'? https://t.co/AZaMUjtYQB
— Jon Tennant (@Protohedgehog) November 28, 2013
Inspiring research, spectacular images; VOTE in The Cell Image Competition > https://t.co/jBwg8nBITU < pic.twitter.com/YwIjTwBI8V
— GE Cell Biology (@GECellBiology) November 29, 2013
A 250 million year old, Triassic era predatory amphibian is today's #FossilFriday – meet Benthosuchus pic.twitter.com/THJ5tsGpOs
— NaturalHistoryMuseum (@NHM_London) November 29, 2013
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