The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
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In this section, The Scientist Magazine features articles, studies, lab talks, reports and more about Leukemia. The Scientist is the magazine for life science professionals, a publication dedicated to covering a wide range of topics. The magazine explores the latest scientific discoveries, trends in research, innovative techniques, new technology, business, and careers.
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Researchers say evidence of hybridization between leukocytes and cancer indicates that this is a primary means of metastasis. Others disagree ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Moderna’s, Pfizer’s, and Johnson & Johnson’s shots all offered protection against the virus regardless of cancer type, although slightly less so in people with blood cancer ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Jessica Morris will discuss strategies to improve CAR-T cell targeting, activation, and killing capabilities ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Nicholas Navin and Lars Velten discuss sampling, sequencing, and tracing single cells to study how cancer cells adapt to various environments ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Tracking human cancers in mice shows some unexpected cell changes that could undermine translational research.   ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
First, the genetically engineered cells became CD8 killer T cells that wiped out his leukemia. Then they transformed into a stable population of CD4 helper T cells that continue to circulate in his body ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Unsatisfied by how treatments for childhood leukemia failed to prevent the disease’s return, Pinkel combined them all—and virtually cured the disease ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
New research in mice reveals why natural killer cells, normally effective at hunting cancer, are sometimes stopped in their tracks.   ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
2M ago
Researchers found that naturally-occurring CD7-negative T cells avoid self-destruction and are good effectors in CAR T therapy for T cell blood cancers ..read more
The Scientist Magazine » Leukemia
3M ago
New research in mice reveals why natural killer cells, normally effective at hunting cancer, are sometimes stopped in their tracks.   ..read more