Synthetic organs, nanobots and DNA ‘scissors’: the future of medicine – includes video

  Nanobots that patrol our bodies, killer immune cells hunting and destroying cancer cells, biological scissors that cut out defective genes: these are just some of technologies that Cambridge researchers are developing which are set to revolutionise medicine in the future. In a new film to coincide with the recent launch of the [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 14th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Chemists use modified DNA nucleotides to create new materials

DNA evolved to store genetic information, but in principle this special, chain-like molecule can also be adapted to make new materials. Chemists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have now published an important demonstration of this repurposing of DNA to create new substances with possible medical applications. TSRI's Floyd Romesberg and Tingjian Chen, in a [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 13th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Gold ‘nanoprobes’ used to track blood flow in tiny vessels

Scientists have designed gold nanoparticles, no bigger than 100 nanometres, which can be coated and used to track blood flow in the smallest blood vessels in the body. By improving our understanding of blood flow in vivo the nanoprobes represent an opportunity to help in the early diagnosis of disease. Light microscopy is a rapidly [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 12th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Nanoparticles that stick wounds together

In spite of medical advances, wound-related complications arising after operations can still be life-threatening. In order to avoid these complications in the future, a new nanoparticle-based tissue glue has been developed by researchers at Empa. There are internal and external areas of the body where it is difficult to apply stitches. Although medical science has [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 11th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Payers have a growing interest in blockchain, but providers have cost concerns

The hype around blockchain — even in healthcare — is steadily increasing. A new survey from Black Book examined how the industry is approaching, investing in and deploying the technology. The Q3 survey included 88 payers and 276 provider technology executives, managers and IT specialists. The results make it clear that the healthcare field sees the value in blockchain. Ninety-three percent of [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 10th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

New microcapsules to enhance the efficiency of genome-editing

Researchers from Tomsk Polytechnic University jointly with their colleagues from St. Petersburg, Hamburg and London have conducted a study in the course of which it was found out that polymer and hybrid silica-coated microcapsules are more efficient in genome-editing when applying CRISPR-Cas9 system. In the future, this joint development will significantly simplify and increase the [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 10th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

A smarter way to screen molecular libraries

A powerful screening strategy devised by RIKEN researchers will make it easier for scientists to assign likely biological functions to different molecules, facilitating the development of safe and effective drugs (Nature Chemical Biology, "Functional annotation of chemical libraries across diverse biological processes"). The scientific community is sitting atop vast mountains of genetic data as well [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:43+00:00October 9th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Nanopatch Vaccine Effectively Combats Polio Virus

With research headed by University of Queensland bioscience experts and funding provided by the World Health Organisation (WHO), the efforts to rid the world of polio have indeed taken another major step. A new study of the Nanopatch – a microscopic vaccine delivery platform initially developed by UQ Researchers - has demonstrated that the device [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:44+00:00October 8th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

The annual Transformative Technology Conference in Palo Alto – Oct. 13-14 2017

Foresight Institute and the Transformative Technology Conference: Technical abilities have greatly accelerated in the last few decades, but the processes to become energized, mentally focused, emotionally connected, aware and internally aligned haven’t followed the same exponential curve. It’s time to accelerate. Global crises are calling upon us to unlock the solutions we have within. It’s [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:50+00:00October 8th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

A 2017 Nobel laureate says he left science because he ran out of money and was fed up with academia

From an article written by Akshat Rathi: Jeffrey Hall, a retired professor at Brandeis University, shared the 2017 Nobel Prize in medicine for discoveries elucidating how our internal body clock works. He was honored along with Michael Young and his close collaborator Michael Roshbash. Hall said in an interview from his home in rural Maine [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:50+00:00October 7th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments
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