24小时热门版块排行榜    

CyRhmU.jpeg
查看: 704  |  回复: 6
【奖励】 本帖被评价5次,作者study163增加金币 5
当前主题已经存档。

study163

木虫 (正式写手)


[资源] [共享]材料物理化学掠影,不断更新

想知道最近的材料物理化学进展吗?想知道最近有哪些好文章吗?
不用一个个地去搜了,这个贴子将定 期更新盘点各个好杂志上的最新文章,敬请关注。为大家节约时间。大家可以挑一些自己感兴趣的去跟踪。将这个贴子放在ms版里吧,这里关注的人比较多。

Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Nature
Burnham researchers discover 'on switch' for cell death signaling mechanism
Scientists at Burnham Institute for Medical Research have determined the structure of the interactions between proteins that form the heart of the death inducing signaling complex, which is responsible for triggering apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
NIH/National Cancer Institute

Contact: Josh Baxt
jbaxt@burnham.org
858-795-5236
Burnham Institute



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Physical Review Letters
IU physicist offers foundation for uprooting a hallowed principle of physics
Physicists at Indiana University have developed a promising new way to identify a possible abnormality in a fundamental building block of Einstein's theory of relativity known as "Lorentz invariance." If confirmed, the abnormality would disprove the basic tenet that the laws of physics remain the same for any two objects traveling at a constant speed or rotated relative to one another.
US Department of Energy's Office of Science

Contact: Steve Chaplin
812-856-1896
Indiana University



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Energy and Buildings
California study shows shade trees reduce summertime electricity use
A recent study shows that shade trees on the west and south sides of a house in California can reduce a homeowner's summertime electric bill by about $25.00 a year. The study, conducted last year on 460 single-family homes in Sacramento, is the first large-scale study to use utility billing data to show that trees can reduce energy consumption.
Forest Service

Contact: Sherri Richardson Dodge
srichardsondodge@fs.fed.us
503-808-2137
USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Cancer Cell
Team finds breast cancer gene linked to disease spread
A team of researchers at Princeton University and The Cancer Institute of New Jersey has identified a long-sought gene that is fatefully switched on in 30 to 40 percent of all breast cancer patients, spreading the disease, resisting traditional chemotherapies and eventually leading to death. In doing so, the scientists may have answered one of the biggest mysteries in cancer research.
US Department of Defense, National Institutes of Health, American Cancer Society, Susan G. Komen Foundation, New Jersey Commission on Cancer Research

Contact: Kitta MacPherson
kittamac@princeton.edu
609-258-5729
Princeton University



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Jupiter-like planets could form around twin suns
Life on a planet ruled by two suns might be a little complicated. Two sunrises, two sunsets. Twice the radiation field. Joel Kastner and his team suggest that planets may easily form around certain types of twin star systems. A disk of molecules discovered orbiting a pair of twin young suns in the constellation Sagittarius strongly suggests that many such binary systems also host planets.


Contact: Susan Gawlowicz
smguns@rit.edu
585-475-5061
Rochester Institute of Technology



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
FASEB Journal
Evolution in action: Our antibodies take 'evolutionary leaps' to fight microbes
With cold and flu season in full swing, the fact that viruses and bacteria rapidly evolve is apparent with every sneeze, sniffle and cough. A new report in the January 2009 issue of the FASEB Journal, explains for the first time how humans keep up with microbes by rearranging the genes that make antibodies to foreign invaders. This research fills a significant gap in the understanding of how the immune system helps us survive.


Contact: Cody Mooneyhan
cmooneyhan@faseb.org
301-634-7104
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Baby Jupiters must gain weight fast
The planet Jupiter gained weight in a hurry during its infancy. It had to, since the material from which it formed probably disappeared in just a few million years, according to a new study of planet formation around young stars.


Contact: David Aguilar
daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu
617-495-7462
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Stars forming just beyond black hole's grasp at galactic center
The center of the Milky Way presents astronomers with a paradox: It holds young stars, but no one is sure how those stars got there. The galactic center is wracked with powerful gravitational tides stirred by a 4 million solar-mass black hole. Those tides should rip apart molecular clouds that act as stellar nurseries, preventing stars from forming in place. Yet the alternative -- stars falling inward after forming elsewhere -- should be a rare occurrence.


Contact: David Aguilar
daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu
617-495-7462
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Milky Way a swifter spinner, more massive, new measurements show
Our home galaxy is rotating about 100,000 miles per hour faster than previously thought, meaning its mass is 50 percent greater. This makes it even with the Andromeda Galaxy, and no longer the "little sister" in our local group of galaxies.
National Science Foundation

Contact: Dave Finley
dfinley@nrao.edu
575-835-7302
National Radio Astronomy Observatory



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Iowa State astrophysicist helps map the Milky Way's 4 spiral arms
Martin Pohl, an Iowa State University associate professor of physics and astronomy, is part of a research team that developed the first complete map of the Milky Way galaxy's spiral arms. The map shows two prominent, symmetric spiral arms in the inner part of the galaxy. The arms extend into the outer galaxy where they branch into four spiral arms.


Contact: Martin Pohl
mkp@iastate.edu
515-294-6448
Iowa State University



Public Release: 2-Jan-2009
Geophysical Research Letters
AGU journal highlights -- Dec. 31, 2008
This release spotlights research papers on these topics: Surprise drop in carbon dioxide absorbed by East/Japan Sea; Big raindrops favor tornado formation; Sand dunes clocked from space; Odd-looking Martian craters indicate hidden ice; Explaining scope of Earth's tropical air flows; Cause of glacial earthquakes in Greenland clarified; Sea rise on continental shelves affected global carbon cycle; Martian avalanches analyzed; Influence in West Africa: biomass burning and mineral dust; and Dust's conflicting roles in West African rainfall.


Contact: Peter Weiss
pweiss@agu.org
202-777-7507
American Geophysical Union



Public Release: 1-Jan-2009
Science
The gold standard: Biodesign Institute researchers use nanoparticles to make 3-D DNA nanotubes
In the Jan. 2, 2009, issue of Science, Hao Yan and Yan Liu, researchers at ASU's Biodesign Institute and faculty in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, reveal for the first time the 3-D character of DNA nanotubules, rings and spirals, each a few hundred thousandths the diameter of a human hair. These DNA nanotubes and other synthetic nanostructures may soon find their way into a new generation of ultra-tiny electronic and biomedical innovations.
National Science Foundation

Contact: Joe Caspermeyer
joseph.caspermeyer@asu.edu
480-313-2010
Arizona State University



Public Release: 1-Jan-2009
Journal of American Dental Association
USC dentist links Fosomax-type drugs to jaw necrosis
Researchers at the University Of Southern California, School Of Dentistry, release results of clinical data that links oral bisphosphonates to increased jaw necrosis. The study is among the first to acknowledge that even short-term use of common oral osteoporosis drugs may leave the jaw vulnerable to devastating necrosis, according to the report appearing in the Jan. 1 Journal of the American Dental Association.


Contact: Angelica Urquijo
urquijo@usc.edu
213-271-4189
University of Southern California



Public Release: 31-Dec-2008
Nature
New visualization techniques yield star formation insights
New computer visualization technology developed by the Harvard Initiative in Innovative Computing has helped astrophysicists understand that gravity plays a larger role than previously thought in deep space's vast, star-forming molecular clouds.


Contact: Christine Pulliam
cpulliam@cfa.harvard.edu
617-495-7463
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics



Public Release: 31-Dec-2008
Cancer Research
In lung cancer, silencing one crucial gene disrupts normal functioning of genome
While examining patterns of DNA modification in lung cancer, a team of international researchers has discovered what they say is a surprising new mechanism. They say that "silencing" of a single gene in lung cancer led to a general impairment in genome-wide changes in cells, contributing to cancer development and progression.


Contact: Jeremy Moore
Jeremy.moore@aacr.org
267-646-0557
American Association for Cancer Research



Public Release: 31-Dec-2008
Clinical Cancer Research
Grape-seed extract kills laboratory leukemia cells, proving value of natural compounds
An extract from grape seeds forces laboratory leukemia cells to commit cell suicide, according to researchers from the University of Kentucky. They found that within 24 hours, 76 percent of leukemia cells had died after being exposed to the extract.


Contact: Jeremy Moore
Jeremy.moore@aacr.org
267-646-0557
American Association for Cancer Research



Public Release: 30-Dec-2008
Journal of Engineering Education
Education practices influence women engineer shortage, MU study finds
As the need for engineering professionals grows, educators and industry leaders are increasingly concerned with how to attract women to a traditional male career. A new University of Missouri study found the impact of the engineering curriculum and obstacles, including self-efficacy and feelings of inclusion, can impede women's success in the predominantly male discipline of engineering.
National Science Foundation

Contact: Jeffrey Beeson
BeesonJ@missouri.edu
573-882-9144
University of Missouri-Columbia



Public Release: 29-Dec-2008
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Moderate drinking can reduce risks of Alzheimer's dementia and cognitive decline
Moderate drinkers often have lower risks of Alzheimer's disease and other cognitive loss, according to researchers who reviewed 44 studies. In more than half of the studies, published since the 1990s, moderate drinkers of wine, beer and liquor had lower dementia risks than nondrinkers.


Contact: Jim Ritter
jritter@lumc.edu
708-216-2445
Loyola University Health System



Public Release: 29-Dec-2008
Journal of Emergency Medicine
New study examines effects of Graniteville, S.C., chlorine gas disaster
A new study examining the aftereffects of a chlorine gas disaster in a South Carolina town gives larger metropolitan areas important insight into what to expect and how to prepare emergency response systems for an accidental or terrorist release of the potentially deadly gas. The study is now available in the January 2009 issue of the American Journal of Emergency Medicine.
RWJF Health & Society Scholars Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control

Contact: Jennifer Combs
jcombs@iqsolutions.com
240-221-4256
IQ Solutions, Inc.



Public Release: 26-Dec-2008
PLoS Computational Biology
How chromosomes meet in the dark -- switch that turns on X chromosome matchmaking
A research group lead by scientists at the University of Warwick has discovered the trigger that pulls together X chromosomes in female cells at a crucial stage of embryo development. This is an important mechanism as the binding together of too many of too few of a particular chromosome can cause a number of medical conditions such as Down syndrome.


Contact: Dr. Mario Nicodemi
M.Nicodemi@warwick.ac.uk
39-333-899-5996
University of Warwick



Public Release: 24-Dec-2008
Cell
Case Western Reserve finds mechanism underlying alt. splicing of premessenger RNA into messenger RNA
A research team led by Tim Nilsen, Ph.D., a professor of medicine and biochemistry at Case Western Reserve University, has discovered an unexpected mechanism governing alternative splicing. The new mechanism suggests that curing the more than half of genetic diseases that are caused by mutations in the genetic code that in turn create mistakes in alternative splicing may be considerably more complicated than researchers have previously assumed.
German Research Foundation, National Institutes of Health

Contact: Christina DeAngelis
christina.a.thompson@case.edu
216-368-3635
Case Western Reserve University



Public Release: 24-Dec-2008
Neuron
Brain starvation as we age appears to trigger Alzheimer's
A slow, chronic starvation of the brain as we age appears to be a major trigger of a biochemical process that causes some forms of Alzheimer's disease. A new study from Northwestern University has found when the brain doesn't get enough sugar glucose -- as when cardiovascular disease restricts blood flow to the brain -- a process is launched that produces the sticky clumps of protein that appear to be a cause of Alzheimer's.
NIH/National Institute on Aging, MetLife Foundation, Northwestern University

Contact: Marla Paul
Marla-Paul@northwestern.edu
312-503-8928
Northwestern University

Public Release: 24-Dec-2008
Cell
Newly found enzymes may play early role in cancer
Researchers at the University of Utah's Huntsman Cancer Institute have discovered two enzymes that, when combined, could be involved in the earliest stages of cancer. Manipulating these enzymes genetically might lead to targeted therapies aimed at slowing or preventing the onset of tumors.
Huntsman Cancer Institute, NIH/National Cancer Institute, Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Contact: Linda Aagard
linda.aagard@hci.utah.edu
801-587-7639
University of Utah
回复此楼

» 猜你喜欢

» 本主题相关商家推荐: (我也要在这里推广)

已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

kuner

铁虫 (正式写手)


★★★★★ 五星级,优秀推荐

强,顶一下,不错,谢谢楼主
4楼2009-01-06 23:02:42
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

study163

木虫 (正式写手)


一月六号

★ ★ ★
fegg7502(金币+3,VIP+0):thank you very much!
Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Old gastrointestinal drug slows aging, McGill researchers say
Recent animal studies have shown that an 80-year old drug once used to treat gastrointestinal disorders can reverse the progression of Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington's diseases. However, scientists had a variety of theories to attempt to explain how a single compound could have such similar effects on three unrelated neurodegenerative disorders. According to researchers at McGill University, clioquinol might actually slow down the aging process. The study was published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.


Contact: Mark Shainblum
mark.shainblum@mcgill.ca
514-398-2189
McGill University



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
Molecular Cell
Biologist finds plant polymerases IV and V are really variants of Polymerase II
It's a little like finding out that Superman is actually Clark Kent. A team of biologists at Washington University in St. Louis has discovered that two vital cellular components, nuclear RNA Polymerases IV and V, found only in plants, are actually specialized forms of RNA Polymerase II, an essential enzyme of all eukaryotic organisms, including humans.
National Institutes of Health, US Department of Energy

Contact: Craig Pikaard
pikaard@wustl.edu
314-935-7569
Washington University in St. Louis



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
Nature
U of T physicists squeeze light to quantum limit
A team of U of T physicists has demonstrated a way to squeeze light to the fundamental quantum limit, a finding that has potential applications for high-precision measurement, next generation atomic clocks, novel quantum computing and our most fundamental understanding of the universe.


Contact: Kim Luke
kim.luke@utoronto.ca
416-978-4352
University of Toronto



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
Journal of Neuroscience
A protein that protects against Alzheimer's?
Research on the mechanisms involved in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, stroke, dementia, Parkinson's and multiple sclerosis, to name a few, has taken a step forward thanks to the work of researchers who have successfully demonstrated the protective and reparative role of apolipoprotein D, or ApoD, in neurodegenerative diseases. Their discovery suggests interesting avenues for preventing and slowing the progression of this type of illness.


Contact: Claire Bouchard
bouchard.claire@uqam.ca
514-987-3000
Universit?du Qu閎ec ?Montr閍l



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
British Journal of Pharmacology
Angina: New drug gets right to the heart of the problem
A compound designed to prevent chest pains in heart patients has shown promising results in animal studies, say scientists. In the second issue of the British Journal of Pharmacology to be published by Wiley-Blackwell, researchers from the Centre de Recherche Pierre Fabre in France, show that the novel compound F15845 has anti-angina activity and can protect heart cells from damage without the unwanted side effects often experienced with other drugs.


Contact: Jennifer Beal
wbnewseurope@wiley.com
44-012-437-70633
Wiley-Blackwell



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Cassiopeia A comes alive across time and space
Two new efforts have taken a famous supernova remnant from the static to the dynamic. A new movie of data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory shows changes in time never seen before in this type of object. A separate team will also release a dramatic 3-D visualization of the same remnant.


Contact: Megan Watzke
mwatzke@cfa.harvard.edu
617-496-7998
Chandra X-ray Center



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
Cell Metabolism
Obesity: Reviving the promise of leptin
The 1995 discovery of leptin, an appetite-suppressing hormone, generated great hopes for an effective obesity drug. But hopes dimmed when it was found that obese people are leptin-resistant. Now, researchers at Children's Hospital Boston have, for the first time, re-sensitized the brain to leptin, using oral drugs that are already FDA-approved. In mice, this led to significant weight loss when combined with leptin treatment.
Timothy Murphy Fund, Children's Hospital Boston

Contact: Andrea Duggan
andrea.duggan@childrens.harvard.edu
617-919-3110
Children's Hospital Boston



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Astrophysical Journal Letters
Astronomers use gamma-ray burst to probe star formation in the early universe
The brilliant afterglow of a powerful gamma-ray burst (GRB) has enabled astronomers to probe the star-forming environment of a distant galaxy, resulting in the first detection of molecular gas in a GRB host galaxy. By analyzing the spectrum of light emitted in the GRB afterglow, the researchers are gleaning insights into an active stellar nursery in a galaxy so far away it appears as it was 10 billion years ago.
National Science Foundation, NASA, TABASGO Foundation

Contact: Tim Stephens
stephens@ucsc.edu
831-459-2495
University of California - Santa Cruz



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Black holes lead galaxy growth, new research shows
Peering deep into the early universe, astronomers may have solved a longstanding cosmic chicken-and-egg problem -- which forms first -- galaxies or the black holes at their cores?
National Science Foundation

Contact: Dave Finley
dfinley@nrao.edu
575-835-7302
National Radio Astronomy Observatory



Public Release: 6-Jan-2009
Cell Metabolism
Factor has pivotal role in obesity, metabolic syndrome
COUP-TFII, a protein known to play a role in development and the formation of organs is also an important factor in the control of obesity and diabetes, said researchers from Baylor College of Medicine in a report that appears in the current issue of the journal Cell Metabolism.
National Institutes of Health, NIH/National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Contact: Graciela Gutierrez
ggutierr@bcm.edu
713-798-4712
Baylor College of Medicine



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Nature
Burnham researchers discover 'on switch' for cell death signaling mechanism
Scientists at Burnham Institute for Medical Research have determined the structure of the interactions between proteins that form the heart of the death inducing signaling complex, which is responsible for triggering apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
NIH/National Cancer Institute

Contact: Josh Baxt
jbaxt@burnham.org
858-795-5236
Burnham Institute



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Physical Review Letters
IU physicist offers foundation for uprooting a hallowed principle of physics
Physicists at Indiana University have developed a promising new way to identify a possible abnormality in a fundamental building block of Einstein's theory of relativity known as "Lorentz invariance." If confirmed, the abnormality would disprove the basic tenet that the laws of physics remain the same for any two objects traveling at a constant speed or rotated relative to one another.
US Department of Energy's Office of Science

Contact: Steve Chaplin
812-856-1896
Indiana University



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Energy and Buildings
California study shows shade trees reduce summertime electricity use
A recent study shows that shade trees on the west and south sides of a house in California can reduce a homeowner's summertime electric bill by about $25.00 a year. The study, conducted last year on 460 single-family homes in Sacramento, is the first large-scale study to use utility billing data to show that trees can reduce energy consumption.
Forest Service

Contact: Sherri Richardson Dodge
srichardsondodge@fs.fed.us
503-808-2137
USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Cancer Cell
Team finds breast cancer gene linked to disease spread
A team of researchers at Princeton University and The Cancer Institute of New Jersey has identified a long-sought gene that is fatefully switched on in 30 to 40 percent of all breast cancer patients, spreading the disease, resisting traditional chemotherapies and eventually leading to death. In doing so, the scientists may have answered one of the biggest mysteries in cancer research.
US Department of Defense, National Institutes of Health, American Cancer Society, Susan G. Komen Foundation, New Jersey Commission on Cancer Research

Contact: Kitta MacPherson
kittamac@princeton.edu
609-258-5729
Princeton University



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Jupiter-like planets could form around twin suns
Life on a planet ruled by two suns might be a little complicated. Two sunrises, two sunsets. Twice the radiation field. Joel Kastner and his team suggest that planets may easily form around certain types of twin star systems. A disk of molecules discovered orbiting a pair of twin young suns in the constellation Sagittarius strongly suggests that many such binary systems also host planets.


Contact: Susan Gawlowicz
smguns@rit.edu
585-475-5061
Rochester Institute of Technology



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
FASEB Journal
Evolution in action: Our antibodies take 'evolutionary leaps' to fight microbes
With cold and flu season in full swing, the fact that viruses and bacteria rapidly evolve is apparent with every sneeze, sniffle and cough. A new report in the January 2009 issue of the FASEB Journal, explains for the first time how humans keep up with microbes by rearranging the genes that make antibodies to foreign invaders. This research fills a significant gap in the understanding of how the immune system helps us survive.


Contact: Cody Mooneyhan
cmooneyhan@faseb.org
301-634-7104
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Baby Jupiters must gain weight fast
The planet Jupiter gained weight in a hurry during its infancy. It had to, since the material from which it formed probably disappeared in just a few million years, according to a new study of planet formation around young stars.


Contact: David Aguilar
daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu
617-495-7462
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Stars forming just beyond black hole's grasp at galactic center
The center of the Milky Way presents astronomers with a paradox: It holds young stars, but no one is sure how those stars got there. The galactic center is wracked with powerful gravitational tides stirred by a 4 million solar-mass black hole. Those tides should rip apart molecular clouds that act as stellar nurseries, preventing stars from forming in place. Yet the alternative -- stars falling inward after forming elsewhere -- should be a rare occurrence.


Contact: David Aguilar
daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu
617-495-7462
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
213th AAS Meeting
Milky Way a swifter spinner, more massive, new measurements show
Our home galaxy is rotating about 100,000 miles per hour faster than previously thought, meaning its mass is 50 percent greater. This makes it even with the Andromeda Galaxy, and no longer the "little sister" in our local group of galaxies.
National Science Foundation

Contact: Dave Finley
dfinley@nrao.edu
575-835-7302
National Radio Astronomy Observatory



Public Release: 5-Jan-2009
Iowa State astrophysicist helps map the Milky Way's 4 spiral arms
Martin Pohl, an Iowa State University associate professor of physics and astronomy, is part of a research team that developed the first complete map of the Milky Way galaxy's spiral arms. The map shows two prominent, symmetric spiral arms in the inner part of the galaxy. The arms extend into the outer galaxy where they branch into four spiral arms.


Contact: Martin Pohl
mkp@iastate.edu
515-294-6448
Iowa State University



Public Release: 2-Jan-2009
Geophysical Research Letters
AGU journal highlights -- Dec. 31, 2008
This release spotlights research papers on these topics: Surprise drop in carbon dioxide absorbed by East/Japan Sea; Big raindrops favor tornado formation; Sand dunes clocked from space; Odd-looking Martian craters indicate hidden ice; Explaining scope of Earth's tropical air flows; Cause of glacial earthquakes in Greenland clarified; Sea rise on continental shelves affected global carbon cycle; Martian avalanches analyzed; Influence in West Africa: biomass burning and mineral dust; and Dust's conflicting roles in West African rainfall.


Contact: Peter Weiss
pweiss@agu.org
202-777-7507
American Geophysical Union



Public Release: 1-Jan-2009
Science
The gold standard: Biodesign Institute researchers use nanoparticles to make 3-D DNA nanotubes
In the Jan. 2, 2009, issue of Science, Hao Yan and Yan Liu, researchers at ASU's Biodesign Institute and faculty in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, reveal for the first time the 3-D character of DNA nanotubules, rings and spirals, each a few hundred thousandths the diameter of a human hair. These DNA nanotubes and other synthetic nanostructures may soon find their way into a new generation of ultra-tiny electronic and biomedical innovations.
National Science Foundation

Contact: Joe Caspermeyer
joseph.caspermeyer@asu.edu
480-313-2010
Arizona State University



Public Release: 1-Jan-2009
Journal of American Dental Association
USC dentist links Fosomax-type drugs to jaw necrosis
Researchers at the University Of Southern California, School Of Dentistry, release results of clinical data that links oral bisphosphonates to increased jaw necrosis. The study is among the first to acknowledge that even short-term use of common oral osteoporosis drugs may leave the jaw vulnerable to devastating necrosis, according to the report appearing in the Jan. 1 Journal of the American Dental Association.


Contact: Angelica Urquijo
urquijo@usc.edu
213-271-4189
University of Southern California
5楼2009-01-07 08:17:35
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

★★★★★ 五星级,优秀推荐

支持鼓励
6楼2009-01-07 11:00:18
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

gpwang526

木虫 (知名作家)


★★★★★ 五星级,优秀推荐

7楼2009-01-08 12:03:32
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖
简单回复
wuli82楼
2009-01-06 14:10   回复  
 
zdhlover3楼
2009-01-06 16:59   回复  
 
相关版块跳转 我要订阅楼主 study163 的主题更新
☆ 无星级 ★ 一星级 ★★★ 三星级 ★★★★★ 五星级
普通表情 高级回复(可上传附件)
信息提示
请填处理意见