News & Opinion

Covering the life sciences inside and out

Two different types of bacteria—one genetically engineered and one from cheese—defend animal intestines from Vibrio cholerae infection.  

A growing number of libraries are unbundling their subscriptions to the full suite of publishers’ journals, opting for limited titles to save on costs.

The receptors, found in so-called elite controllers who don’t need medications to keep the virus in check, suggest a new path toward immunotherapy.

Computational biologists are optimistic that the purchase of the world’s largest hub for open-source computer code will not affect the way they use GitHub for science.

The Nutshell

Daily News Roundup

His decision came as an investigation into sexual harassment allegations against him was ongoing.  

A report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine found that despite increased attention on inappropriate behavior, efforts to reduce misconduct have not worked.

Although more evidence is needed to pin down a cause, researchers suspect that climate change is to blame.

Vaccination reduced the risk of death by two-thirds for children with no other health problems.  

Current Issue

June 2018

Issue Cover: Microbial Treasure

Identification of new archaea species elucidates the domain’s unique biology and sheds light on its relationship to eukaryotes.

The functions of the cellular invaginations identified more than half a century ago are now beginning to be understood in detail.

A step-by-step study of diseases that jump species gives subtle clues about future epidemics.

The IoT can link up many facets of research—from laboratory equipment to ideas—but scientists must be ready for the questions its implementation could raise.

Multimedia

Video, Slideshows, Infographics

Blast off into orbit, where researchers on the International Space Station are growing plants in systems that may one day sustain astronauts traveling far across the solar system and beyond.

The discovery of copious new archaeal species is shedding light on the tree of life and revealing some unique cellular biology.

The Marketplace

Sponsored Product Updates

Learn about the significance of immunocytochemistry along with its applications for live-cell and protein analysis in disease research with this eBook from The Scientist, sponsored by Incucyte, a Sartorius Brand!

Humankine products are created in HEK293 cells using animal-free components. Our human expression system ensures that proteins have native conformation and post-translational modifications to optimize biological activity. No expression tags, xeno-free…just high quality proteins.

Advanced Instruments—a leading developer of scientific and analytical instruments for the clinical, biopharmaceutical, and food-and-beverage industries—will feature the distinguished Dr. Robert Jerris at ASM Microbe 2018 on Sunday, June 10, 2018 at 10:30am in booth 1610.

Limerick, PA. April 18, 2018 – Rockland Immunochemicals, Inc. announced today that Chief Science Officer, Dr. Carl Ascoli testified at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine’s third of six public session on Reproducibility and Replicability in Science on April 18th.

Learn about standardized processing techniques along with proficiency testing protocols used to construct NGS libraries with this eBook from <i>The Scientist</i>, sponsored by LGC Biosearch Technologies!

A mass spectrometer analyzes molecules by determining the mass-to-charge ratio of ions. The ionization process requires careful consideration to ensure proper molecular separation without disintegration. Picking the right ionization option greatly extends the capabilities of mass spectrometry analysis and detection.

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Featured Comment

I remember watching GATTACA with some other grad students in the 90's, we liked it but laughed at the 'impossible' fast sequencing done to validate people's identities. Now we do seven impossible things before breakfast, so to speak.

Allison Mackay, commenting on The Scientist's story about a new, hand-held sequencer that can reportedly decode the entire human genome.

Pocket-Size Nanopore Device Sequences Entire Human Genome