ASCB Logo

2010 Press Book

2010 Press Book - Web Version (Full PDF Document)

View Now

The release dates for these three "Cell Biology 2010" stories have been extended indefinitely due to pre-publication embargoes by journals which have them in press. Please contact the author directly for further information:

Page 4--Jungwoo Lee, "Transplanting bone marrow as a bioengineered implant in the skin could raise blood-making stem cell survival rates."

Page 12--Qing Deng & Anna Huttenlocher, "A laboratory zebrafish models a rare genetic immune disorder that threatens newborns."

Page 13--Stephen Doxsey, "Mice reveal how defective cell division could drive human primordial dwarfism."

To view other stories individually, please click on the title below:


Page 2 Compounds that inhibit prostate cancer cell metastasis identified in pomegranate juice
(View Video)
Manuela Martins-Green and Lei Wang, University of California, Riverside
(267KB)
Page 3 A ubiquitous sugar molecule, hyaluronan shows a new role in repairing deep wounds without scarring
Cornelia Tolg and Eva Turley, London (Ontario) Health Sciences Centre/ London Regional Cancer Program
(197KB)
Page 5 Two diverse pathogens, Toxoplasma and Chlamydia, share a sickening evolutionary trick
Julia D. Romano, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
(178KB)
Page 6 A grow-your-own-insulin transplant strategy for men with type I diabetes would turn sperm cell precursors into pancreatic islets
Ian Gallicano, Georgetown University Medical Center
(212KB)
Page 7 Deleting the ghrelin receptor, but not ghrelin, keeps aging mice youthfully thin
Yuxiang Sun, Baylor College of Medicine
(184KB)
Page 8 The trypanosome behind African sleeping sickness reveals an unexpected talent for social behavior and communication
(View Video 1) (View Video 2) (View Video 3)
Kent Hill, University of California, Los Angeles
(248KB)
Page 9 New intravital microscopy finds clear differences between in vitro and in vivo studies
(View Video 1) (View Video 2) (View Video 3)
(View Image 1 - Hi Res  |  Low Res) (View Image 2 - Hi Res  |  Low Res)
Roberto Weigert, National Institutes of Health, NIDCR
(293KB)
Page 10 Like the fairy princess on the mattress pile, stem cells can feel what's under the bedding
Amnon Buxboim, University of Pennsylvania
(222KB)
Page 11 A gene transcription factor rescues mitochondrial energy and clears protein clumps from the brains of mice modeling Huntington's disease
Albert R. La Spada, University of California, San Diego
(220KB)
Share