Browse our latest Medicine articles

Page 4 of 59
    1. Medicine
    2. Cancer Biology

    Development and Assessment of a Sustainable PhD Internship Program Supporting Diverse Biomedical Career Outcomes

    Patrick D Brandt, Dawayne Whittington ... Rebekah L Layton
    Revised
    Reviewed Preprint v2
    Updated
    1. Medicine

    Point of View: Applied research won’t flourish without basic science

    Jon R Lorsch, Lawrence A Tabak, Monica M Bertagnolli
    Three senior figures at the US National Institutes of Health explain why the agency remains committed to supporting basic science and research.
    1. Medicine

    Ocular biomarker profiling after complement factor I gene therapy in geographic atrophy secondary to age-related macular degeneration

    Thomas M Hallam, Emanuela Gardenal ... Amy V Jones
    Not revised
    Reviewed Preprint v1
    1. Medicine

    Transplantation of exogenous mitochondria mitigates myocardial dysfunction after cardiac arrest

    Zhen Wang, Jie Zhu ... Xiang Zhou
    Not revised
    Reviewed Preprint v1
    1. Medicine

    PKR activation-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in HIV-transgenic mice with nephropathy

    Teruhiko Yoshida, Khun Zaw Latt ... Jeffrey B Kopp
    Single-nuclear transcriptomic profiling and functional assays identified PKR activation and mitochondrial dysfunction in HIV-associated nephropathy mice kidneys.
    1. Cancer Biology
    2. Medicine

    Insights into metabolic heterogeneity of colorectal cancer gained from fluorescence lifetime imaging

    Anastasia D Komarova, Snezhana D Sinyushkina ... Marina V Shirmanova
    The level of heterogeneity of cellular energy metabolism increases with model complexity and is the highest in patients' tumors, which can be observed and quantified using FLIM of NAD(P)H.
    1. Medicine
    2. Neuroscience

    Interrogating basal ganglia circuit function in people with Parkinson’s disease and dystonia

    Srdjan Sumarac, Kiah A Spencer ... Luka Milosevic
    The hypo- versus hyperkinetic nature of Parkinson’s disease and dystonia, respectively, may be reflected by differences in disease-specific spiketrain dynamics and striato-pallidal synaptic plasticity.