Scientists have developed functional eggs from ordinary human skin cells, a proof of concept that could open up new ways to treat infertility.
Oregon scientists used human skin cells to create fertilizable eggs, a step in the quest to develop lab-grown eggs or sperm to one day help people conceive.
Eggcelsior! Scientists have made a landmark breakthrough that enables the creation of viable human egg cells from a skin cell, new research claims. The study, published in Nature Communications, ...
US scientists testing the technique say it could help people overcome infertility and potentially allow same-sex couples to ...
More work needs to be done to create viable human embryos, but the method might someday be used in IVF to help infertile people and male couples.
A reproductive medicine professor described the work as an “exciting proof of concept” that may change approaches to ...
Scientists digitally reconstructed a 1 million-year-old skull unearthed in China. The analysis suggests it may have belonged ...
Digital reconstruction of a partially crushed skull suggests new insight into Homo sapiens’ evolutionary relationship to Denisovans and Neandertals.
"We already know that practices such as physical exercise, a balanced diet, and pharmacological treatments contribute ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Scientists Reconstruct a Million-Year-Old Skull and Suggest It Could Rewrite Our Timeline of Human Evolution
Thirty-five years ago, a badly crushed skull was unearthed from a riverbank in central China. At the time, scientists could not accurately classify the fossil because of how damaged it was. But now, a ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Human Head Transplants: Where the Science Stands, and Why the Ethics Are So Complicated
Learn more about human head transplants. Are they possible? And what moral dilemmas do they bring forth?
Space.com on MSN
Artemis 2 astronauts will double as human science experiments on their trip around the moon
NASA has selected Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy Hansen as ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results