Test highlights benefits of new blood
20 May 2011Old red blood cells shown to have undergone ‘significant changes and damage’; techniques could help rapidly monitoring quality of blood supply.
Old red blood cells shown to have undergone ‘significant changes and damage’; techniques could help rapidly monitoring quality of blood supply.
A novel mechanism of cell death that occurs in mammalian organisms has been revealed by researchers at the University of Cambridge.
The Cambridge Centre for Proteomics is internationally recognised for pioneering technology that helps us to understand what proteins do inside cells.
Scientists have found what they believe is the missing link between heart failure, our genes and our environment. The study could open up completely new ways of managing and treating heart disease.
Scientists are close to discovering how normal breast cells become cancerous, according to research published today.
Elizabeth Blackburn, an alumna of Darwin College and a recipient of an Honorary Doctorate of Science from the University earlier this year, has been awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine.
Scientists have discovered a completely new route by which leukaemia develops, according to research published in Nature this weekend.