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KTH researchers identify 300 proteins that regulate cell division process
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Stanford, optimistic about COVID-19 trends, to allow juniors and seniors back on campus
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IMAGE: A montage of microscopic images that show the stages of the cell cycle, in which a single cell duplicates its DNA and eventually divides into two daughter cells. Staining shows. view more
Credit: KTH Royal Institute of Technology/SciLifeLab
With the hope of contributing to the fight against cancer, researchers in Sweden have published a new molecular mapping of proteins that regulate the cell division process - identifying 300 such proteins.
The release of the data, which was published today in the scientific journal,
Nature, is significant because it helps bring medical research closer to the point of being able to target specific proteins to treat cancer.
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Children exposed to air pollution, such as wildfire smoke and car exhaust, for as little as one day may be doomed to higher rates of heart disease and other ailments in adulthood, according to a new Stanford-led study. The analysis, published in Nature
Scientific Reports, is the first of its kind to investigate air pollution s effects at the single cell level and to simultaneously focus on both the cardiovascular and immune systems in children. It confirms previous research that bad air can alter gene regulation in a way that may impact long-term health - a finding that could change the way medical experts and parents think about the air children breathe, and inform clinical interventions for those exposed to chronic elevated air pollution.
Stanford Health Care (Photo: STEVE FISCH/Stanford Health Care)
on February 18, 2021
Santa Clara County plans to extend vaccine eligibility to workers in education, child care, food and agriculture and emergency services beginning Feb. 28. These groups will join healthcare workers and those aged 65 and older, who have already been eligible for over eight weeks.
According to Associate Vice Provost Russell Furr, Medical Director Rich Wittman and Strategic Health Initiatives director Rajan Puri, the newly eligible groups are part of California’s Phase 1B for vaccine allocation, which defines those working in education as anyone at risk of being exposed to COVID-19 in “colleges, universities, junior colleges, community colleges and other postsecondary education facilities,” Furr wrote in a Thursday email to the community.
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