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Results 1351 - 1360 of 1443 for Research Institute of Molecular Pathology
  • News - 15 May 2007
    Polyphenols, dietary substances from vegetables, fruits and green tea, bring about a change in the energy metabolism.
  • News - 7 May 2007
    An immune system component that is a primary cause of bone destruction and inflammation in autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis actually protects bone in the oral cavity from infectious...
  • News - 30 Apr 2007
    Mice whose brains had lost a large number of neurons due to neurodegeneration regained long-term memories and the ability to learn after their surroundings were enriched with toys and other sensory...
  • News - 21 Apr 2007
    Scientists have discovered one of the reasons why bladder cancer is so much more prevalent in men than women: A molecular receptor or protein that is much more active in men than women plays a role in...
  • News - 16 Apr 2007
    An international research team , including investigators from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and the Broad Institute of Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has...
  • News - 16 Apr 2007
    Two papers by Columbia and Harvard researchers report for the first time that astrocytes (the most abundant non-neuronal cells in the central nervous system), which carry a mutated gene known to cause...
  • News - 12 Apr 2007
    A new University of Michigan Medical School study sheds light on cell defects that lead to one common type of ovarian cancer and puts forth a promising new mouse model that already is being used for...
  • News - 21 Mar 2007
    Scientists who focus on the molecular signaling that underlies prostate cancer have discovered a compound that shows promise against a debilitating neurodegenerative condition known as Kennedy's...
  • News - 14 Mar 2007
    Scientists have discovered a new type of cell that appears to play a role in the development of cancer – a highly volatile, precancerous stem cell that can either remain benign or become malignant,...
  • News - 20 Feb 2007
    Gene mutations governing a key brain enzyme make people susceptible to schizophrenia and may be targeted in future treatments for the psychiatric illness, according to MIT and Japanese researchers.

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