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Molecular & Cellular Biology

288 papers  ·  Page 4 of 6

Cell biology, molecular biology, genetics, microbiology, developmental biology, and the machinery of life at small scales.

Paradigm Challenge
Brain cells don't just passively die in Alzheimer's; they 'bulk up' their communication machinery to actively resist toxic proteins.
Apr 1
First Ever
Human brain organoids have been trained to play a Pac-Man-style video game when provided with sensory feedback.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
Temporarily shutting down the brain's 'control center' actually makes people better at some types of learning.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
Hundreds of our genes randomly switch off either the mother's or the father's copy, making every person a 'patchwork' of different genetic expressions.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
LSD administered to pregnant mice reaches the embryonic brain fluid within 15 minutes, causing immediate physical remodeling of the fetal brain.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Blocking the 'love hormone' oxytocin for just a short period during childhood leads to permanent obesity and metabolic changes in adulthood.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
A quantum biophysical parameter explains why most HIV patients don't suffer cognitive decline.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
The spider-web shape of mitochondria might be a mathematical inevitability rather than a biological design.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Fruit fly embryos naturally try to grow in a spiral, but their eggshells force them to stay straight.
Apr 1
First Ever
A single AI model can now predict physical traits from DNA across four different kingdoms of life.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Your pupils constrict when you count silently in your head, revealing the presence of 'inner speech'.
Apr 1
Practical Magic
A new engineered virus can deliver gene therapy to the brain 2,000 times more effectively than current methods.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
AI-designed environments can make organisms just as 'fit' as millions of years of genetic evolution.
Apr 1
Life Origin
The machinery that lets mitochondria power our cells was not a 'eukaryotic innovation' but was inherited from ancient bacteria.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Some fruit flies carry up to 60 full copies of their entire mitochondrial genome stashed inside their main nuclear DNA.
Apr 1
Practical Magic
Scientists adapted Wall Street financial risk models to predict exactly when tuberculosis patients are going 'biologically bankrupt.'
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Common bacteria living in the human urinary tract are capable of synthesizing testosterone directly.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
A 30-year-old textbook assumption about how the brain selects its first neurons has been debunked.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Physically squeezing an immune cell is enough to force it to transform into a different cell type, no chemicals required.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
The physical roundness of the fluid-filled cavities in a developing brain tells stem cells exactly how to divide.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Genetically identical armadillo quadruplets develop unique, lifelong immune system fingerprints despite being clones.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Plants can experience 'optical illusions' that cause them to grow in the wrong direction.
Apr 1
First Ever
Scientists have revealed the high-resolution structure of massive 'storage lockers' in egg cells that hold the ingredients for life.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
A single gene has been identified as the 'master switch' for nearly all physical sensation, including touch, heat, and pain.
Apr 1
First Ever
The first complete cell-by-cell map of the entire developing human body has been created.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
Mice move their eyes voluntarily to look at objects, debunking the long-held belief that their eye movements are purely reflexive.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
An audit of the world's largest immunology database found that 70% of the data was generated by AI models rather than experiments, creating a massive 'echo chamber.'
Apr 1
First Ever
Researchers proved for the first time that toxic Alzheimer's proteins retain their specific physical structures when passed from human brains into animals.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Mammalian eggs store embryonic building blocks on a physical 3D grid to keep them inactive until development begins.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
Blood stem cells can survive without the two energy-generating processes previously thought essential for all complex life.
Apr 1
Practical Magic
Common medications like statins and antidepressants can accidentally shield 'superbugs' from antibiotics.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Bacteria have evolved to use DNA 'glitches' as biological logic gates for survival.
Apr 1
Life Origin
Scientists reconstructed the physical evolution of a biological clock protein across 3 billion years of history.
Apr 1
Nature Is Weird
Carnivorous plants actually make their 'death traps' stickier and more lethal while they are flowering and trying to attract pollinators.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
A rare 'temperate rainforest' featuring plants usually only found in centuries-old forests has been discovered growing on top of a 75-year-old industrial landfill.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
A study of over 1,200 bird species reveals that female appearances are specifically evolved for 'social warfare' and predator evasion, rather than just being 'unfinished' versions of males.
Apr 1
Paradigm Challenge
The brain's navigation system is mathematically powerful enough to work as a universal computer capable of solving any problem.
Mar 31
Nature Is Weird
Brain cells only open the 'delivery gates' to their recycling centers at specific times of day, and missing this window causes insomnia.
Mar 31
Paradigm Challenge
A wide variety of animals systematically delete large portions of their own DNA as they grow, meaning their bodies have less genetic information than their eggs.
Mar 31
Nature Is Weird
Human cells build their essential machinery using complex economic strategies like 'trading' and 'externalities' based on what we eat.
Mar 31
First Ever
Scientists discovered a single master protein that coordinates when a plant's energy centers should grow versus when they should split.
Mar 31
Paradigm Challenge
Some cell receptors act as biological 'handcuffs' that trap signaling proteins to prevent other pathways from activating.
Mar 31
Nature Is Weird
Your unique gut bacteria can determine whether an antibiotic-resistant 'superbug' survives or dies based on how they compete for food.
Mar 31
Practical Magic
Common laboratory freezing techniques selectively 'erase' specific types of genetic information, potentially biasing years of biological research.
Mar 31
Paradigm Challenge
The slow movement seen in Parkinson's disease is driven by a warped perception of effort rather than a loss of motivation.
Mar 31
Nature Is Weird
We found a giant virus that looks like a weird, loose bag with a long tail, and it literally generates its own light energy.
Mar 30
Paradigm Challenge
A massive study of 53,000 animal groups found that 80% aren't actually shrinking, which totally flips the script on the 'everything is dying' narrative.
Mar 30
Paradigm Challenge
That 'universal law' of how animals burn energy might just be a random side effect of how cells grow.
Mar 30
Nature Is Weird
LSD literally unhooks your brain activity from its physical wiring—and that’s exactly why you feel like your 'self' is disappearing.
Mar 30
Paradigm Challenge
Collagen isn't just 'body glue'—it’s more like a motor that cranks itself tight to make your bones rock hard.
Mar 30