Each human is a finely tuned orchestra of more than 37 trillion cells. Mapping this little-known world is one of biology’s greatest challenges — and one in which scientists say they just made a ...
The human body contains an astonishing 36 to 37 trillion cells, each serving unique functions across organs and systems. In a groundbreaking initiative, the Human Cell Atlas (HCA), an international ...
June 20, 2005 (Toronto) -- Not everything that lights up on F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET)/computed tomography (CT) scans is cancerous, and a newly developed whole body ...
To understand biomolecules in context, researchers need to know where they are expressed and what they do in healthy tissues. But with roughly 37 trillion cells in a healthy human body, that knowledge ...
Sign up for the CommonHealth newsletter to receive a weekly digest of WBUR's best health, medicine and science coverage. If you flip open a biology textbook or do a ...
As an ambitious project to map all the cells in the human body gets officially under way, Aviv Regev, Sarah Teichmann and colleagues outline some key challenges. You have full access to this article ...
Let’s be honest—who hasn’t wondered what the embryonic development of a sea squirt looks like? Well, keep yourself in suspense no longer. Simply head on over to FABA, the Four-Dimensional Ascidian ...
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