Saviour cells and tricky transport
26 September, 2014 | Claire Scott |
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Slow and steady doesn't win the race: the complex relationship among exercise, aging and gender. https://t.co/hg7hCi0ydw
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 25, 2014
It's too late for me – save yourselves! In Drosophila, dying cells protect survivors from radiation-induced death. https://t.co/iYKM70bTG4
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 23, 2014
Stuck on you: how kinesin is able to transport dynein to the microtubule plus end, despite dynein's resistance. https://t.co/md3RmK8UyS
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 22, 2014
And elsewhere on Twitter…
Scientific sign language means deaf students and scientists are no longer lost for words https://t.co/zEMsvuN4bB pic.twitter.com/b8jpaoAzaK
— Chemistry World (@ChemistryWorld) September 25, 2014
Turmeric – a hot topic. How curcumin is spicing up brain repair & regeneration: https://t.co/TOXFnlcH4a #dementia pic.twitter.com/EwNlMekTAM
— BioMed Central (@BioMedCentral) September 26, 2014
Mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia #bacteria released in #Brazil in a bid to reduce #dengue https://t.co/3OQWxUAPqM #mosquito
— Sanjaya Senanayake (@sanj971) September 26, 2014
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