Researchers at TU Wien have developed a new way to grow cartilage from stem cells and guide it into basically any shape required. The breakthrough could lead to better ways to patch up injuries.
Scientists are harnessing cells to make new types of materials that can grow, repair themselves and even respond to their environment. These solid “engineered living materials” are made by embedding ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
From cells to semiconductors: AI reconstructs microscopic 3D worlds from electron microscopy
The Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science (KRISS) has developed an artificial intelligence (AI)-based image ...
MIT researchers discovered that the genome’s 3D structure doesn’t vanish during cell division as previously thought. Instead, tiny loops called microcompartments remain (and even strengthen) while ...
While medical centers use ultrasound daily, so far this technology is not capable of observing body tissues at the scale of cells. Physicists from TU Delft have developed a microscopy technique based ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Researchers refine tools to map DNA’s 3D structure inside cells
DNA isn't just a long string of genetic code, but an intricate 3D structure folded inside each cell. That means the tools ...
In work published in Nature Biotechnology, Rubin and his research group turned to 3D cell culture to take on the problem of generating sufficient satellite cells for regenerative therapies. 2 ...
3D-printed lungs made with living cells could help to improve lung disease prevention and treatment—and potentially one day offer a lab-grown option for use in organ transplants. University of ...
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