Joel Sachs, University of California, Riverside Nyholm and other biologists refer to the light organ as a “symbiotic organ” for its specialized role in housing and talking with the squid’s luminescent ...
Tissue engineering utilizes 3D printing and bioink to grow human cells on scaffolds, creating replacements for damaged ...
Scientists recreated the origins of one of life's most important partnerships, uncovering how symbiotic relationships can ...
When different species work together for their mutual benefit, it is called symbiosis (or mutualism) — a process that is essential for the health of ecosystems. This is a cluster of Candida albicans ...
In a new breakthrough, researchers at Seoul National University of Science and Technology (SEOULTECH) have developed a novel ...
Recent research highlights the role of the vaginal microbiome in preventing cervical cancer. Probiotics aid in maintaining a ...
Insect symbiosis refers to the close and often long-term interactions between insects and microorganisms, particularly bacteria. These relationships can be mutualistic, where both the insect and ...
For example, pectinases are enzymes that break down pectins – indigestible dietary fibers for humans, but metabolized by many bacteria. Approximately half of the species of leaf beetles live in close ...
The evolutionary success of leaf beetles, the most varied herbivores on Earth, was investigated by researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena, Max Planck Institute of ...
Give a bacteria-fungi biofilm access to sweetened tea and you can make not only kombucha – but a fibre vital to making ...
Rhizobial symbiosis refers to the mutually beneficial relationship that forms between plants and soil bacteria that fix nitrogen, termed rhizobia. Nuclear calcium oscillations initiate plant ...
If you've ever made kombucha, you will be familiar with the term SCOBY—a symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast. It's ...