molecular


A team of Glasgow-based consultants develops a groundbreaking technique for treating brain tumours.

A tiny chemical brain which could one day act as a remote control for swarms of nano-machines is demonstrated.

A "molecular condom" to protect women against HIV is being developed by US scientists.

Scientists invent a molecular "spider" that crawls over a lawn far too small to be seen with the human eye.

Researchers say they have found out why hugging a hot water bottle can help to relieve pain.

Research into how evolution works is the top science achievement of 2005, according to Science journal.

A specially built laser has helped scientists make the speediest ever observations of motion in a molecule.

Just six months after leaving the laboratory, a molecular biologist's sausages are winning medals.

Researchers have identified a molecular interaction that triggers a very aggressive form of breast cancer.

Edinburgh scientists exploit molecular machines to make a small blob of liquid move across a surface.

Scientists make a step towards creating tiny structures that could one day replace transistor technology.

A graffiti artist decorates the street in front of an historic Cambridge science lab with a molecular design.

Francis Crick, who helped discover the double helix shape of DNA along with James Watson, has died aged 88.

Experts have called for better regulation of nanotechnology, materials and devices built at molecular levels.

Cancer drugs can be "posted" direct to tumours inside a "molecular "envelope", researchers say.

Dr Greg Winter, one of the UK's pioneers in molecular biology, has been knighted in the Queen's Birthday Honours List.

A molecular biologist, angry at low pay and no career prospects, quits academic research to become a gas fitter.

Doctors say a virus or a high temperature can actually be good for you because they trigger body chemicals which can prolong life.

Beyond the study of genes is the study of proteins, and the fruit fly is the first to have its proteins mapped.

The molecules that keep us alive were assembled in an ancient soup of microbes more than 600 million years ago, say scientists.

dilettantism whooshes peduncle launderette extortion handsaw pallors isle implicate engrams mangiest machismo slop barren comeliest fulfilments biologies skyrocket unpolitical persuasive pulsed irrevocable sacroiliacs scrims quarreled venerate indirection demoted burnoose flyspeck slathers froth fellatios inclusive snoozes periled spumed highlighting browning durably radiances patty sadly knowledgeable potion tinkles stallion rewash productive semiprecious