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What is foot and mouth disease?

Foot and mouth disease—usually referred to by its acronym FMD—is the most feared livestock disease in the world. It can cripple the livestock sector, cause immense animal suffering, destroy farmer businesses, create food insecurity and has massiv.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxJul 12th, 2022

A single peptide helps starfish get rid of a limb when attacked

A signaling molecule that's so potent injected animals may drop more than one limb. Enlarge (credit: Hal Beral) For many creatures, having a limb caught in a predator’s mouth is usually a death sentence. Not starfish,.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsSep 14th, 2024

Rapid diagnostics tool deployed to monitor wheat rust in Nepal

The recent discovery of the Ug99 wheat stem rust strain in Nepal, published in the Plant Disease journal, has once again emphasized the need for vigilance to protect Nepal's third most important food crop from any large-scale outbreaks of this devast.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 13th, 2024

Scientists develop artificial sugars to enhance disease diagnosis and treatment accuracy

Scientists have found a way to create artificial sugars that could lead to better ways to diagnose and treat diseases more accurately than ever before......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 13th, 2024

Soil nutrient levels associated with suppression of banana Fusarium wilt disease

Fusarium wilt poses a significant threat to global agriculture, particularly affecting the banana industry, where it is commonly known as banana Panama disease. As a result, enhancing soil-related resistance has emerged as a crucial, environmentally.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 12th, 2024

Climate change-triggered landslide unleashes a 650-foot mega-tsunami

In September 2023, scientists around the world detected a mysterious seismic signal that lasted for nine straight days. An international team of scientists, including seismologists Alice Gabriel and Carl Ebeling of UC San Diego's Scripps Institution.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 12th, 2024

Human "molecular map" contributes to the understanding of disease mechanisms

Scientists at Weill Cornell Medicine in Qatar (WCM-Q) have created an intricate molecular map of the human body and its complex physiological processes based on the analysis of thousands of molecules in blood, urine and saliva samples from 391 volunt.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 11th, 2024

Promoting horse welfare with an intestinal disease screening method

Researchers at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, are developing a promising method to support the diagnosis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) in horses. Awareness of the prevalence of IBD in both humans and animals has increased in recent de.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsSep 10th, 2024

High-throughput biosensor measures metabolite levels that indicate disease

Researchers at the Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI), Kanazawa University, have developed a biosensor that improves sensitivity to 1-methylnicotinamide (1-MNA) in urine by orders of magnitude without the need for sample purification. The work.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsSep 10th, 2024

Scientists learn how to drug wily class of disease-causing enzymes

UCSF scientists have discovered how to target a class of molecular switches called GTPases that are involved in a myriad of diseases from Parkinson's to cancer and have long been thought to be "undruggable.".....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 9th, 2024

Strawberry disease could threaten Hampton Roads" spring harvest

In a few weeks, strawberry growers in southeast Virginia will plant their crop to be harvested in May. But many are concerned about a disease that could drastically reduce next year's yield......»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsSep 9th, 2024

The Mosquito-Borne Disease ‘Triple E’ Is Spreading in the US as Temperatures Rise

Eastern equine encephalitis, which has a high mortality rate, is becoming more common in North America as climate changes expands the habitats of insects......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  wiredRelated NewsSep 7th, 2024

Why Polio Has Reemerged in Gaza

After a quarter of a century, the disease has returned to Gaza, prompting a campaign to immunize all of the territory's children against the virus......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  wiredRelated NewsSep 7th, 2024

This could increase your risk of Alzheimer’s disease more than anything: study

This could increase your risk of Alzheimer’s disease more than anything: study.....»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsSep 7th, 2024

Experts Stunned As 8-Foot Shark Is Seemingly Eaten By Predator

Experts Stunned As 8-Foot Shark Is Seemingly Eaten By Predator.....»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsSep 7th, 2024

Faced with a tight deadline, NASA and Blue Origin agree to delay New Glenn debut

"We can’t take our foot off the pedal here." Enlarge / The second stage of the New Glenn rocket rolled to the launch site this week. (credit: Blue Origin) NASA and Blue Origin announced Friday that they have agreed to.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsSep 6th, 2024

Solving the side effect problem of siRNA drugs for genetic disease treatment

Small interfering RNA (siRNA) drugs are a class of therapeutic agents that silence specific genes associated with inherited diseases. However, siRNA drugs have challenges because siRNAs often silence genes other than the target ones, causing side eff.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 6th, 2024

Neolithic bones reveal isolated Yersinia pestis infections, not pandemics

Since the catastrophic pandemics of the Middle Ages, one disease has almost proverbially symbolized contagion and death: the plague. It is now known that the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis has been present in Central and Northern Europe for more th.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 6th, 2024

Q&A: How single-cell and spatial proteomics reveal proteins" nuanced roles in health and disease

When Steve Carr, senior director of the Proteomics Platform at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, began working in proteomics, the field was able to detect only the most abundant proteins in a given sample. In recent years, increasingly sensitiv.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024

New mRNA and gene editing tools offer hope for dengue virus treatment

Dengue virus, a painful and sometimes fatal mosquito-borne infection well known in tropical countries, is surging rapidly across the planet. Now, 4 billion people live in places at risk for the disease, like the southeastern United States, which does.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024

Researchers develop molecular biosensors that only light up upon binding to their targets

Biosensors—devices that use biological molecules to detect the presence of a target substance—have enormous potential for detecting disease biomarkers, molecules-in-action in diverse biological processes, or toxins and other harmful substances in.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024