Scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have created a database that provides updated predicted structures on a ...
Scientists at NUS have found that DNA’s phosphate groups can guide chemical reactions like molecular “hands.” Chemists at the ...
Janelia researchers have uncovered a novel way that two of the structures inside cells—the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and ...
This study examines how evolutionary relaxation and functional change of INSL3 and RXFP2 relate to natural cryptorchidism in ...
A collection of studies that chart how mammalian brain cells grow and differentiate is a ‘very valuable’ tool for ...
DNA isn't just a long string of genetic code, but an intricate 3D structure folded inside each cell. That means the tools ...
Researchers have identified a previously unknown “hook-like” domain in the tail of the kinesin-2 motor protein that explains how these molecular machines select the right cargo inside cells.
Scientists are hopeful it will improve understanding of how genes work, what goes wrong in disease, and how to fix it.
For decades, scientists have known that motor proteins like kinesin-2 ferry vital cargo along microtubule "highways" inside cells. But how these molecular vehicles identify and bind to the right cargo ...