Scientists have uncovered a new explanation for how swimming bacteria change direction, providing fresh insight into one of ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Active mechanical forces drive how bacteria switch swimming direction
Scientists have uncovered a new explanation for how swimming bacteria change direction, providing fresh insight into one of ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
New antibody mechanisms disrupt bacterial adhesion in urinary tract infections
Pathogens can create sticky situations. When microbes invade the body to cause an infection, often one of their first lines ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists found a lifeform they can’t classify, and it’s baffling
Biologists are confronting a problem they thought they had mostly solved: what, exactly, counts as life. A wave of ...
From your brain to your heart, added sugar quietly impacts nearly every part of your body in ways you may not even realize.
Effective Sjögren’s management demands a strict separation between symptomatic relief for sicca and immunosuppression for ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
16,000 new species discovered every year: a record!
Every year, scientists add thousands of new names to the great book of life. This momentum was initiated by the work of ...
SussexWorld on MSN
'Positive response' - Worthing council says businesses are 'helping to remedy accidental misconnections' to improve coastal water quality
Local businesses are playing their part in efforts to improve coastal water quality in Worthing, according to the local ...
Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) arises from complex interactions among diet, host and gut microbiome. Although diet influences intestinal inflammation, the microbial and metabolic pathways ...
ExplorersWeb on MSN
Two Dozen New Species of Bacteria Found Inside Sterilized NASA Rooms
Somehow, 26 new species of bacteria have managed to survive in the harshest place on Earth -- a NASA cleanroom.
These bacteria don’t eat food or breathe air like we do. All they need is to complete a circuit; that’s enough for them to ...
4don MSN
New research decodes the bacterial “zip code” of colorectal cancer for prediction and survival
A recent study reveals that bacteria residing within colorectal tumors form distinct ecosystems closely linked to disease ...
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