Researchers are targeting dormant tumour cells that might explain why some cancers reappear long after successful treatment.
The Print on MSNOpinion
How Gen-Z is changing the violent extremist landscape online
The evolving extremist threat now hinges on young people online, demanding new strategies beyond traditional counter-terror ...
Revolutionary-era smallpox, the still-mysterious ignition of the Black Death, a modern measles outbreak shaped by community identity and distrust, and the promise of genetics to build safer drugs—a ...
Gautam Menon, professor at Ashoka University, and his team modeled a potential H5N1 spillover in a poultry district. Their ...
Morning Overview on MSN
1 protein block slowed cancer in mice, and it’s a promising target
Researchers have identified a single protein whose absence can cripple tumors in mice, slowing their growth and in some cases ...
Morning Overview on MSN
As our gut ages, key genes go quiet and scientists now know why
As people live longer, the gut quietly accumulates damage that can tip the balance between healthy tissue renewal and chronic ...
Balanophora may look like a mushroom, but instead of being a fungus, it's a parasitic plant with rare traits that puzzle ...
Roblox Steal a Brainrot's Cursed Mutation Update adds a sinister look for Brainrots, so here's when it goes live and what you ...
Elon Musk’s chatbot Grok keeps churning out nonconsenual images of women and minors in bikinis and lingerie, outraging users ...
Blood cancer is an umbrella term for a variety of diseases that affect the blood, bone marrow and lymphatic system. Like most ...
Live Science on MSN
Did any cat breeds develop naturally?
Some of the once-natural breeds are more closely connected to their roots than others are. Modern Siberian cats, for example, ...
Happy New Year! I’m back with some horrific AI news. Grok’s Gruesome New Hobby Elissa Welle at The Verge: xAI’s Grok is ...
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