Health & Medicine
Gum disease bacteria can promote cancer growth in mice
In mice, the oral bacteria F. nucleatum can travel to mammary tissue via the bloodstream, where it can damage healthy cells.
By Meghan Rosen
Every print subscription comes with full digital access
In mice, the oral bacteria F. nucleatum can travel to mammary tissue via the bloodstream, where it can damage healthy cells.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
A new study finds that humans and AI spot different kinds of deepfakes — hinting at the need to team up to fight them.
Thinking positive increased a specific brain region's activity and might have heightened immune response after a shot.
Humpback whales are teaching each other a feeding technique called bubble netting, and it's helping a Canadian population recover from whaling.
The tool helps scientists understand how single-letter mutations and distant DNA regions influence gene activity, shaping health and disease risk.
In mice, blocking heart-to-brain signals improved healing after a heart attack, hinting at new targets for cardiac therapy.
An ancient ancestor of spiders and relatives doubled its genome about 400 million years ago, setting the stage for the evolution of spinnerets.
Vaccines can be a crucial conservation tool. But getting shots to wildlife, and developing them in the first place, is tough.
When it comes to bucking the biological ails of aging, humans could learn something from Greenland sharks.
Scientists have described a novel, yet benign bone-covered growth's characteristics for doctors, so patients don't receive unnecessary chemotherapy.
Subscribers, enter your e-mail address for full access to the Science News archives and digital editions.
Not a subscriber?
Become one now.