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Consumer & Gadgets Apr 3, 2018

iOS 11.3 lets you monitor your iPhone battery and stop Apple from slowing it down

Apple has released the highly anticipated software update for the iPhone that promises to give you greater visibility into your own health—as well as the health of what could be a failing handset battery.

Ecology Mar 25, 2018

Quackery and superstition: species pay the cost

A pinch of powdered chimpanzee bone, some gecko saliva, a dash of vulture brain.

Archaeology Mar 6, 2018

Drilling holes in the skull was never a migraine cure – but it was long thought to be

Trepanation – the technique of removing bone from the skull by scraping, sawing, drilling or chiselling – has long fascinated those interested in the darker side of medical history. One stock tale is that trepanning is ...

Business Dec 14, 2017

Israeli drugmaker Teva to cut quarter of global work force (Update)

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., the world's largest generic drugmaker, on Thursday said it would lay off over a quarter of its workforce as part of a global restructuring meant to salvage its ailing business.

Biochemistry Dec 12, 2017

Scientists create molecule of love with less complications

A new and improved version of the 'love hormone' oxytocin has been developed by University of Queensland researchers.

Cell & Microbiology Dec 7, 2017

Researchers discover the unexpected atomic structure of cold and menthol sensor TRPM8

A team of researchers from The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) and Duke University has made the first determination of the atomic structure of Transient Receptor Potential Melastatin 8 (TRPM8), a molecular sensor in nerve ...

Biochemistry Nov 13, 2017

Researchers identify the inner workings of cellular calcium pumps

For the first time, researchers have observed the ion pumps that activate cell transport and signal systems. This ensures the function of biomolecular mechanisms.

Environment Oct 31, 2017

How has air quality been affected by the US fracking boom?

Urban air pollution in the U.S. has been decreasing near continuously since the 1970s.

Archaeology Aug 23, 2017

You and some 'cavemen' get a genetic checkup

Had an arrow in his back not felled the legendary Iceman some 5,300 years ago, he would have likely dropped dead from a heart attack. Written in the DNA of his remains was a propensity for cardiovascular disease.

Biochemistry Jun 1, 2017

First full-length structure of GLP-1 receptor bound to peptide agonist

Heptares Therapeutics has published the first high-resolution X-ray crystal structure of the full-length glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor bound to a peptide agonist.

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