The lactic acid bacterium found in the dish helps bind nanoplastics inside the intestine, allowing them to remain together ...
According to WHO, approximately 6% of the worldwide population who contract COVID-19—some 400 million people—go on to develop ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Gut bacterium Roseburia inulinivorans linked to stronger muscles
A single species of gut bacterium found in human stool samples correlates with measurably stronger muscles across multiple ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
World TB Day: A New Clue Offers Hope Against The Deadliest Infection
(stockdevil/iStock/Getty Images) After decades of decline in the developed world, tuberculosis (TB) is back on the rise, and ...
2don MSN
AI tool can screen unknown bacteria for disease-linked genes, moving closer to preventing pandemics
PathogenFinder2 is a new AI tool developed by researchers at DTU in Denmark, in collaboration with international partners, to ...
Long COVID continues to affect millions of people worldwide, and scientists are still trying to understand why some patients ...
A new study found that eating kimchi may help remove nanoplastics from your body. The bacteria in kimchi bind to the ...
Scientists have discovered the world's largest bacterium in a Caribbean mangrove swamp. Most bacteria are microscopic — but this one is so big it can be seen with the naked eye. The thin white ...
Researchers have developed a ‘smart tweezer’ that is able to pluck a particular bacterial strain from a microbiome of trillions and sequence its genome in a more cost- and resource-effective way than ...
A new species of Rickettsia bacterium called Rickettsia finnyi has been identified by researchers after analysis of samples ...
A bold new theory proposes that a super-survivor microorganism could survive under Mars’ barren surface for hundreds of millions of years. The upshot? That scientists should be on the lookout for it ...
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