A breakthrough live-cell sensor makes DNA repair visible as it happens, unlocking new possibilities in biology and medicine.
Mitochondrial DNA has long been treated as a workhorse record of cellular history, but new research suggests it also hides a subtle and previously overlooked form of damage. By uncovering this cryptic ...
Scientists have created a live-cell DNA sensor that reveals how damage appears and disappears inside living cells, capturing ...
Cancer research, drug safety testing and aging biology may all gain a major boost from a new fluorescent sensor developed at ...
Scientists searching for new ways to combat cancer think they may have uncovered a promising new lead in the DNA of the ...
New live-cell DNA damage sensor lets scientists watch repair unfold in real time, potentially opening doors for cancer and aging research.
The sensor lets researchers watch DNA damage and repair as it happens in living cells and organisms, making studies possible.
Two stories just published provide a much different picture of how bacterial cells continually repair lesions in their DNA. Led by researchers from the NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the work ...
A previously unknown type of DNA damage in the mitochondria, the tiny power plants inside our cells, could shed light on how ...
Artios Pharma, which looking for newer targets that, like PARP inhibitors, affect the way tumors fix themselves, said its ...