High-throughput screening assay developed to discover antimalarials
A new assay has been developed to screen for small molecule inhibitors of the Rh5 protein, which is essential for malaria parasite survival.
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A new assay has been developed to screen for small molecule inhibitors of the Rh5 protein, which is essential for malaria parasite survival.
Researchers have measured the gene expression of healthy and cancerous single cells from breast tissue, creating an 'RNA atlas'.
Researchers have used cryo-EM to show that a new nanobody cocktail can bind to the S protein of SARS-CoV-2, neutralising the coronavirus.
A new technology called mass cytometry, or CyTOF, is providing new insights into a range of key proteins in blood cancer cells.
The National Drug Discovery Centre (NDDC) has opened in Australia, with support from the government to subsidise the screening of medicinal compounds.
A collaborative team has developed a compound called WM382, which targets two crucial enzymes in the malaria parasite, effectively killing it.
A study has shown that natural killer cells are linked to the protein GM-CSF, which causes inflammation, indicating a new target for rheumatoid arthritis.
A new discovery on how the immune system responds to malaria infection could lead to better treatments for hepatitis C, HIV and lupus.
Researchers in Australia and the US have launched the first open-source database detailing genetic variants that impact human health and disease.
A new technique called ‘ubiquitin clipping’ has been created which could aid proteomics research and the development of new drugs for ubiquitination.
A molecular switch that impacts immune responses to viral infections has been identified which could lead to better strategies to develop vaccines.
Scientists in Australia have discovered how the most important gene in preventing cancer, TP53, is hampered in its tumour-fighting efforts by mutant p53 proteins.
After combining over 700,000 2D images, researchers have finally been able to build a 3D image of how insulin binds to its receptor...
A discovery about how human cells are 'triggered' to undergo an inflammatory type of cell death could have implications for treating cancer, stroke and tissue injury, and immune disorders...
A research team has discovered the process - and filmed the actual moment - that can change the body’s response to a dying cell.