Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists finally crack why some brain cells defy deadly dementia
Researchers at UCLA Health and UC San Francisco have identified a specific molecular mechanism that explains why certain ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Record 27% efficiency: China’s back-contact solar cells break barriers with silicon wafers
Despite their clear efficiency advantages, high-resistivity, lightly doped silicon wafers have seen limited adoption ...
FAYETTEVILLE, GA, UNITED STATES, February 3, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- A bilayer perovskite strategy improves ...
Light can hit a lead halide perovskite crystal that is anything but pristine and still end up as useful electric current.
Century Therapeutics (IPSC) aims at a durable “once-and-done” Type 1 diabetes cure with hypoimmune iPSC beta cells; runway to ...
How do sea molluscs create the consistent patterns on their shells? How do they know when and how to change the pigment?
In nanoscale particle research, precise control and separation have long been a bottleneck in biotechnology. Researchers at the University of Oulu have now developed a new method that improves ...
High-resistivity silicon wafers offer superior efficiency potential but are highly sensitive to edge recombination and mechanical damage, limiting their commercial use compared to more robust standard ...
For decades, scientists assumed that order drives efficiency. Yet in the bustling machinery of mitochondria—the organelles that crank out adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the universal "energy currency" ...
University of Surrey researchers discovered a compound known as nanostructured sodium vanadate hydrate (NVOH) – a layered sodium-based material that naturally contains water within its crystalline ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Some brain cells resist dementia and scientists finally cracked the code
Researchers have identified a specific protein complex inside neurons that tags toxic tau fragments for destruction, offering the clearest explanation yet for why certain brain cells survive while ...
In this interview, Dr. Marsh Durban explores how innovations such as controlled seeding and size‑selection are enabling researchers to generate uniform, assay‑ready organoids at scale.
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