Morning Overview on MSN
1 dose of frog gut bacteria erased cancer in mice, humans next
A bacterium living quietly in the intestines of a tiny tree frog has done something cancer researchers spend careers chasing: ...
Scientists have discovered a promising new approach to fighting cancer in the gut bacteria of a Japanese tree frog, with one ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X East Rock seventh grader Jeryl searches for frog’s large intestines… Credit: Maya McFadden Photos ...
Japanese researchers have succeeded in producing see-through frogs, letting them observe organs, blood vessels and eggs under the skin without performing dissections. Dissections have become ...
ZME Science on MSN
A Bacterium from the Gut of This Tiny Frog Can Clear out Aggressive Colon Tumors in Mice
Researchers have shown that a bacterium plucked from the gut of this frog can successfully eradicate aggressive colon tumors ...
Gadget Review on MSN
A single dose of frog's gut bacteria wiped out cancer in lab mice – human trials are next
Tree frog gut bacteria eliminated 100% of colorectal tumors in mice, but human cancer treatment faces safety hurdles and ...
Scientists have discovered that frogs have the ability to regrow limbs. It was already known that other animals, like salamanders, starfish, crabs and lizards could do the same. Researchers at Harvard ...
A new study led by UCC paleontologists discovered that frogs have conserved their ecology in the last 45 million years. The ...
The frogs are made using synthetic tissue and mimic properties of a live frog. The smell of formaldehyde in classrooms may soon be a thing of the past as high schools begin to introduce synthetic ...
A Dec. 12 Metro article about animals that freeze solid incorrectly said that spring peepers and gray tree frogs lose their ability to freeze as they age. The animals keep that ability into adulthood.
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