Video How can we grow new body parts with stem cells? | The Royal Society If you're familiar with the image of the Vacanti mouse, you'll know the potential power of stem cells to grow new body parts. In a special double feature, meet two researchers working at the cusp of stem cell research. Visit the team's website: https
Discover how UV light could safely remove tumours, compare yourself to an ape and listen to ancient Antarctic ice… Also, have your say on the legal, ethical and technical challenges of stem cell-based embryo models.
Bees to BO, robot surgeons to Mars rovers, explore it all with the UK’s top scientists through the Royal Society’s… The Royal Society lists the activities and research to uncover at Summer Science 2021
Seeing is believing: YAP dynamics in living embryos in Cell Biology in China, studying Embryonic Stem Cells. Then I went on to study mouse genetics and early embryo development with Dr. ... The lineage identity of those cells and the causal relationship between YAP activity and the persistent cell
Video Remaking ourselves: human genome editing | The Royal Society Dr Philip Ball, winner of the 2022 Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar Medal, joins us to discuss human genome editing, and the importance of keeping historical and cultural perspectives visible in these debates. Our biotechnologies have entered uncharted
Science sees further: How science will answer some of the world's biggest questions The Royal Society launches a new report to celebrate its founding 350 years ago.
Bone-shaking tech inspired by hunt for gravitational waves could transform bone graft therapies Instead of chemicals or drugs, the team uses tiny high frequency vibration, called ‘nanokicking’, to trigger stem cells into becoming bone producing cells. ... For bone graft treatments stem cells could be taken from a patient’s bone marrow or even
A tribute to former President of the Royal Society Sir Aaron Klug OM FRS (1926 – 2018) To that end, he encouraged the Society to engage in wide-ranging public debate on topics like embryonic stem cells, GM plants and climate change.
Most influential women in British science history Later, at the Gurdon Institute, she continued research on stem cells.
Royal Society announces 2011 Copley Medal recipient The Royal Society, the UK’s independent academy for science, has announced the recipients of its 2011 Awards, Medals and Prize Lectures today.