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Bio-IT World
December 15, 2003
Malorye A. Branca
Scenes from a Cell Breakthroughs are making cell-based screening faster, easier, more powerful. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
February 1, 2006
Ron Feemster
Gene Logic: Rescue Squad One or two late-stage clinical failures can land promising drug candidates on the shelf. Forever? Maybe not. Gene Logic tests Big Pharma's dead drugs for hundreds of different targets. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 14, 2011
Sarah Farley
Fish in chips: growing embryos in microfluidic systems Scientists in the Netherlands and the UK have shown for the first time that an animal embryo can develop in a microfluidic environment. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 11, 2015
James Urquhart
Sweetening imaging of disease processes US researchers have imaged cell-surface glycans -- sugars bonded to proteins or lipids -- throughout the internal tissues of live zebrafish for the first time. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World Fishing for Chemical Answers to Biological Questions James K. Chen talks about chemical biology, his love for the outdoors and fly fishing. mark for My Articles similar articles
HHMI Bulletin
Fall 2012
Megan Scudellari
In Living Color Vikas Gupta and Kenneth Poss created dozens of zebrafish with vibrantly colored cardiomyocytes and then examined the fish hearts at select moments between hatching and adulthood. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 1, 2008
Simon Hadlington
Click chemistry illuminates embryo development US researchers have smuggled modified sugar molecules into a developing zebrafish embryo and then used 'click chemistry' to snap a fluorescent tag onto them to watch cells and tissues forming. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
August 6, 2015
Emma Stephen
Molecular container mops up tricaine to reverse anaesthesia in fish A lack of clinically available antidotes for general anesthesia has prompted a team of researchers in China and Canada to explore the potential of a macrocyclic compound for halting anesthesia in zebrafish. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 1, 2011
Josh Howgego
Small molecules open gates to the brain New tools have been developed which make it possible to chemically shut down nerve cells in the brain at will and study the effects on behavior. The tools - modified ion channels - mean the causal relationship between individual nerves and behavior can be directly studied. mark for My Articles similar articles
ifeminists
November 17, 2004
Byron Fraser
Review: Your Drug May Be Your Problem Excerpts from the book Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications by Peter Breggin and David Cohen delineating the adverse effects of these medications and how to stop taking them. mark for My Articles similar articles