Groups of bacteria can work together to better protect crops and improve their growth
Scientist Susanna Harris in the lab. Credit: Noam Eckshtain-Levi, Susanna Leigh Harris, Reizo Quilat Roscios,...
Scientist Susanna Harris in the lab. Credit: Noam Eckshtain-Levi, Susanna Leigh Harris, Reizo Quilat Roscios,...
by Sam Husseini “Pandemics are like terrorist attacks: We know roughly where they originate and...
A temperature-responsive, porous hydrogel enables more efficient and sustained protein synthesis. To enhance recombinant protein...
by Heather Day In October of this year, the Cornell Alliance for Science (CAS) hosted...
Emails obtained by U.S. Right to Know show that a statement in The Lancet authored by 27...
Complex 3D nanoscale architectures based on DNA self-assembly can conduct electricity without resistance and may...
Field work in North Carolina Credit: E. C. Wallace, K. N. D'Arcangelo, and L. M....
By Chris SmajeThe palm civet is a small omnivorous mammal of Indonesia and other parts...
by Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign When their...
Nanoparticles are not new, bacteria have been making them since long before we had a...