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Chemistry World May 13, 2013 Emma Stoye |
Step towards a spider venom vaccine Brazilian researchers have engineered a protein that should make producing antivenoms to treat spider bites both cheaper and simpler. |
Chemistry World March 24, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
Opossum peptide antivenom could take on snake bites An antidote based on a protein found in the blood of opossums could offer an effective low-cost treatment for snake bites, researchers in the US have found. |
American Family Physician June 15, 2003 David B. K. Golden |
Stinging Insect Allergy Insect stings usually cause transient local inflammation and occasional toxic reactions. However, allergic hypersensitivity can result in more severe local reactions or generalized systemic reactions. |
Food Processing December 2008 |
Preventing Allergies with Probiotics Exposing pregnant mothers and infants to probiotic bacteria could help stimulate the growth of the immune system and play a role in preventing allergies, according to researchers. |
HHMI Bulletin Aug 2010 Sarah C.P. Williams |
Gut Bacteria Do More Than Digest Food Someone can blame their diabetes or inflammatory bowel disease on the churning mass of bacteria that lives inside their intestines, but there's no magic pill to change the dynamics of that complicated world of the human microbiome. |
Scientific American April 2009 Michael Tennesen |
Snakebit: Southern Pacific rattlesnake versus humans Humans may have paved the way for the Southern Pacific rattlesnake |
Chemistry World August 6, 2015 Ida Emilie Steinmark |
Bee immune system discovery points way to pollinator 'vaccines' Bees use an egg yolk protein to prime their offspring's immune system against different pathogens, Finnish researchers have discovered. |
Salon.com March 11, 2000 Bryan Mealer |
Jawboning with Snakeburger Bill Ransberger of Sweetwater, Texas, is famous for being bitten 42 times by rattlesnakes and living to tell about it. A conversation with the man the rattlesnakes love to sink their teeth into... |
Chemistry World June 4, 2014 Simon Hadlington |
Spider venom pesticide 'harmless to bees' A pesticide based on the venom of a spider, which is toxic to nuisance insects such as aphids and caterpillars, appears to be harmless to honeybees. |