Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists figured out why some DNA-doubled cells refuse to die, finding the ones born from failed cell division are far more stable and likely to survive
Cells that double their entire genome do not all share the same fate. New research published in the Proceedings of the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Cells that double their DNA through failed division survive far better than those from botched chromosome splits, a clue to how some cancers take hold
Cells that acquire a doubled genome after a failed division step survive and proliferate far more effectively than cells left ...
In each cell of your body, DNA is stored in structures called chromosomes. When cells divide, these chromosomes are copied, ...
During animal cell division, a highly synchronized and tightly regulated dance of chromosomes takes place, ensuring the ...
Scientists have uncovered a surprising twist in how cells behave when division goes wrong. Sometimes a cell successfully copies its DNA but fails to split into two, leaving it with double the genetic ...
Physical pressure can stop cancer cells from growing large enough to divide, revealing why squeezed tumors may stall.
Yeast’s emergence as a model organism reshaped scientific discovery in cell biology, genetics, and more.
Just one enzyme manages the refilling of the cellular soda machine that replicates our genes. PLK-1 initiates a process in two protein groups, leading to creation of new CENP-A proteins. These CENP-A ...
Cells in the human body accumulate cancer-promoting mutations throughout their lifespan, yet these mutations rarely drive tumour formation. Tumours in a given tissue usually originate from a specific ...
Scientists have uncovered a surprising new way that giant embryonic cells divide—without relying on the classic “purse-string” ring long thought essential for splitting a cell in two. Studying ...
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