Vietnam Investment Review on MSN
Omics Empower Hong Kong launches Xenium spatial transcriptomics services
HONG KONG, Feb. 13, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Omics Empower, a global life science service provider specializing in single-cell sequencing and spatial transcriptomics, announced that Xenium™ In Situ ...
SANTA CLARA, CA, UNITED STATES, January 20, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- OmicInsight Corporation, an innovator in ...
A new software tool, ovrlpy, improves quality control in spatial transcriptomics, a key technology in biomedical research. Developed by the Berlin Institute of Health at Charité (BIH) in international ...
A new spatial transcriptomic technology captures RNA patterns without requiring expensive imaging ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Study explores whether a bidirectional causal link exists between MASLD and sarcopenia
Background and aims Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and sarcopenia frequently coexist, yet their causal relationship and underlying mechanisms remain poorly defined.
Home > Pressemitteilung: New software detects hidden errors in ...
Scientists in the laboratory of Rendong Yang, Ph.D., associate professor of Urology, have developed a new large language model that can interpret transcriptomic data in cancer cell lines more ...
Basepair, a leader in cloud-native bioinformatics analysis, and Sciencewerke Pty Ltd, an Australian specialist in research genomics solutions and scientific supply chain integration, today announced a ...
Disruption of fatty acid storage triggers tumor cell death in preclinical models of high-risk medulloblastoma, offering a ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
New spatial omics platform advances biomedical research in Spain
Spatial omics is a new generation of technologies that allow scientists to study cells in their original location within ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Brain scans of recovered COVID-19 patients expose brain changes
For many people who have “recovered” from COVID-19, the illness lingers as brain fog: forgotten appointments, lost words ...
Indian Defence Review on MSN
Human Bodies Don’t Age Gradually. They Break at Two Exact Ages, Right on Schedule
For decades we thought aging was gradual. Stanford’s 7 year study proves otherwise.
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