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BioWorld - Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Home » Topics » Science, BioWorld Asia

Science, BioWorld Asia
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Gympie Gympie stinging tree
Bench Press

If a tree stings in the wood, it’s with a peptide

Sep. 22, 2020
By Anette Breindl
Australia is famous, among other things, for venomous animals. Its plants, it turns out, are just as hostile. Now, researchers at the University of Queensland have isolated “neurotoxic peptides from the venom of the giant Australian stinging tree,” as they titled their paper. While the tree’s venomous effects were no secret – the authors wrote that it is known for its “remarkably persistent and painful stings upon contact,” which can produce pain flares for weeks – the effect had been attributed to small molecules.
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2020 KoNECT-MOHW-MFDS International Conference

SK C&C looks to AI to enhance Korean drug discovery process

Sep. 15, 2020
By Gina Lee
HONG KONG – The Korean 2020 KoNECT-MOHW-MFDS International Conference, which is taking place online this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, faced a challenging start. Technical difficulties hampered some of the early proceeding. However, technology took focus again later in the day in a more positive, with an exploration of artificial intelligence (AI).
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2020 KoNECT-MOHW-MFDS International Conference

Implementing AI in the drug discovery process is difficult but not impossible

Sep. 15, 2020
By Gina Lee
HONG KONG – The use of artificial intelligence in drug discovery was back in the spotlight on the last day of the 2020 KoNECT-MOHW-MFDS International Conference, with drug developers pointing out both challenges and possible solutions.
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Gene editing illustration

Commission urges international cooperation, continuing research in gene editing report

Sep. 15, 2020
By Nuala Moran
LONDON – The international commission convened in the aftermath of Chinese scientist He Jiankui’s shock announcement of the birth of gene edited twins has set a possible course to approval of heritable gene editing, but said the technique is far from ready for use.
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Glucose testing

New therapeutic target for blood sugar control identified

Sep. 8, 2020
By John Fox
An Australian study led by University of Melbourne scientists has identified a previously unknown role for the hepatokine, sparc-related modular calcium-binding protein 1 (SMOC1), in suppressing hepatic glucose production.
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Petri dish and capsules

Singapore-based researchers find a SMART way to reduce bacterial antibiotic resistance

Aug. 25, 2020
By David Ho
HONG KONG – Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) research enterprise in Singapore have found a way to not just reverse antibiotic resistance but also increase sensitivity in some bacteria, using hydrogen sulfide.
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Science-8-14

Acupuncture shown to regulate inflammation in mice

Aug. 18, 2020
By John Fox
A Sino-U.S. collaborative study has demonstrated that acupuncture regulates inflammation by activating pro- or anti-inflammatory signaling pathways, while mitigating cytokine storms in mice with systemic inflammation, the study authors reported in the Aug. 12, 2020, edition of Neuron.
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Herd immunity illustration

COVID-19: Trying for herd immunity without vaccine ‘unethical’ and ‘unachievable’

July 7, 2020
By Anette Breindl
A large epidemiological study published in the July 6, 2020, advance online issue of The Lancet found that most individuals who became infected with SARS-CoV-2 developed antibodies to the virus, confirming that infection usually results in at least a short-term immune response.
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CAR T cells attacking senescent cells

CAR T cells target senescence marker, ameliorate cancer, fibrosis

June 23, 2020
By Anette Breindl
By targeting chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) to a senescence marker, researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center have developed a CAR T cell that had beneficial effects in mouse models of both liver fibrosis and lung cancer.
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Fidget spinner toy and diagnostic fidget spinner

Centrifugation can be child’s play with fidget spinners

June 2, 2020
By John Fox
Fidget spinners are hand-held toys based on a roller bearing and three weighted lobes, which can spin freely, creating centrifugal force when activated manually.
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