The cells in your pancreas, like people, can only handle so much stress before they start to break down. Certain stressors, such as inflammation and high blood sugar, contribute to the development of ...
New insights into the brain could pave the way for targeted treatments for anxiety, depression, and other mental health ...
Understanding how human neurons cope with the energy demands of a large, active brain could open up new avenues for treating ...
Oxidative stress occurs when there's an imbalance between the production of ROS and the body's ability to counteract their ...
Whether cells in the human body survive or die under stress depends, among other things ... of diseases in which inflammatory processes play a role – such as gout, type 2 diabetes or severe cases of ...
Stress may be the reason people with obesity are more likely to get other metabolic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, ...
Researchers investigating ways to reduce exhaustion in cancer-fighting T-cells found that the Golgi apparatus can be used as a simple marker -- more Golgi means a more robust cell.
Pancreatic cells, like human cells, have a limit to how much stress they can handle before they start to break down. Through ...
The work points toward dozens of genes that connect cell stress and diabetes risk, including one that is already under investigation as a drug target for type 2 diabetes complications. When living ...