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Scientists at the University of Technology Sydney 3D bioprinted placental organoids to study the placenta in eary pregnancy.
UTS scientists have achieved a major breakthrough by 3D bioprinting miniature placentas, providing a new way to study ...
Scientists have achieved a major breakthrough by 3D bioprinting miniature placentas, providing a new way to study pregnancy complications.
Cambridge scientists built a two-part cancer drug that activates only in tumors with high enzyme levels, showing promise in ...
How do cells know what they should become as the body develops? Biological development depends crucially on spatial patterns: ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World-first 3D placentas print early tissue, test drugs, and reveal pregnancy risks
This breakthrough combines 3D bioprinting, organoid technology, and placental research. It may pave the way for safer drugs, ...
Modern imaging is contributing significantly to giving us a better understanding of how our brains work. In the long term, this will also help us to treat learning disorders in a more targeted way and ...
AZoLifeSciences on MSN
How Xenotransplantation Moved From Failed Experiments To Lifesaving Reality
Xenotransplantation, leveraging genetic engineering and CRISPR, offers a promising solution to the organ shortage crisis ...
Science writer Mary Roach chronicles both the history and the latest science of body part replacement in her new book. She ...
University of Technology Sydney (UTS) scientists 3D bioprint miniature placentas - providing a new way to study complications in pregnancy.
The way Dr. Paul Niehans, a stony-faced, ramrod-straight Swiss physician told it, his theory and practice of “cellular therapy” sounded plausible enough. Thirty years ago he had begun transplanting ...
Organoids have emerged as a groundbreaking technology in cell biology, offering a three-dimensional culture system that ...
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