An international study led by the University of Basel has discovered that nuclear pore complexes—tiny gateways in the nuclear ...
New research finds that cancer cells with a more easily deformed nucleus are more sensitive to DNA-damaging drugs.
Cr yo-ET captured dozens of projection images of each slice from different angles. Computational processing then stitched ...
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) controls what moves in and out of the cell nucleus. Scientists have long debated how its ...
Scientists at Children's Medical Research Institute (CMRI) have made a major discovery about cancer cells. This new ...
Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute have shown that the 'pacemaker' controlling yeast cell division lies inside the nucleus rather than outside it, as previously thought. Having the pacemaker ...
A team of Yale researchers discovered how a protein called Ndc1 coordinates nuclear pore and envelope assembly after cell division, an important component of understanding how cell nuclei change in ...
Around one million individuals worldwide become infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, each year. To replicate and spread the infection, the virus must smuggle its genetic material into the ...
Because viruses have to hijack someone else’s cell to replicate, they’ve gotten very good at it—inventing all sorts of tricks. A new study from two University of Chicago scientists has revealed how ...
Cancer cells with a cell nucleus that is easily deformed are more sensitive to drugs that damage DNA. These are the findings ...