Scientists have discovered that a rare “mirror-image” version of the amino acid cysteine can dramatically slow the growth of ...
Researchers mapped distinct cancer cell communities within supratentorial ependymoma tumors, showing how different cell types ...
A hidden clue may explain why some mutated cells become cancerous and others don’t: how fast they divide. A new study from researchers at Sinai Health in Toronto reveals that the total time it takes ...
The finding suggests other chemo drugs, too, may be making cancer cells cause a surprising immune-system reaction.
New research published in Nature finds that tumor cells within supratentorial ependymomas (SE)—an aggressive childhood brain cancer—cluster into distinct tumor cell populations. Much like a ...
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