Researchers visualise how orthoreovirus assembles inside infected cells
Researchers have captured the assembly of orthoreovirus, part of the Reoviridae family, inside infected cells using cryo-electron tomography.
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Researchers have captured the assembly of orthoreovirus, part of the Reoviridae family, inside infected cells using cryo-electron tomography.
Scientists have patented their technique of inhibiting cellular growth factor signalling to stop SARS-CoV-2 replication and treat COVID-19.
Using cryogenic electron microscopy, scientists have observed the interaction between antibodies and their target molecules, providing information that could be utilised in the development of synthetic antibodies.
HCPs are critical to quality control in biologics development. If left unremoved, they can cause immunogenic responses and reduce drug efficacy.
A new technology named OligoFISSEQ has been created which can image and three-dimensionally map the genomes in hundreds of cells at the same time.
Drug Target Review highlights five of the latest imaging advancements in the field of microscopy.
The researchers suggest the regions they identified in their study could be targeted to improve dysfunctional behaviours associated with autism spectrum disorders, even in adults.
Mass production with iPSCs: how Ncardia has pushed the boundaries with high-throughput iPSC research.
Neuroinflammation study by combining human iPSC-derived astrocytes and HTRF.
Get reproducible and quantitative count, size, morphology and particle ID in one system with the Aura™.
Controlled manufacturing of hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes in stirred-tank bioreactors enabling high-throughput phenotypic screening.
This Ncardia company presentation will explain how human stem cell technology offers a solution for drug screening as well as cell therapy projects.
Protein Or not? Advanced high throughput aggregate analysis with The Aura™ - Find the problem before it happens particle analysis reimagined.
Researchers grew large crystals and used an X-ray machine with a less intense beam to elucidate the structure of the SARS-CoV-2 main protease at room temperature.
26 June 2020 | By Tecan
This webinar described the recent efforts to identify small molecule therapeutics for the treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 disease.