Scientists have utilised AI to predict T cell receptors, advancing personalised medicine, and boosting immunotherapy and vaccine development.
A new trial is looking for chemical markers in the breath of people with silicosis. A second project will test drugs that may help lung scarring.
A hands-on, fish-focused course offers an inspiring, authentic experience for high school students to see the scientific method from start to finish.
Scientists have unlocked the secret of how a hydrogen gas-scavenging enzyme uses trace hydrogen in the air to create energy, opening the door to create devices that can produce energy.
Professor Jamie Rossjohn is internationally recognised for using structural biology to investigate how T cells can respond to viral infections or cause autoimmunity. Now, he's been named a fellow of the oldest science academy in the world.
Professor Dena Lyras’ continuing mission lies in trying to understand the formidable enemy of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, particularly those in the human gut.
Understanding very early human development is a step closer after researchers created the cellular structure that becomes an early human embryo.
Research shows that soils filter trace gases from the atmosphere significantly more than previously believed.
Dr Erica Tandori, a legally blind artist, is working with biomedical researchers to scale up microscopic life and place it, literally, into people’s hands.
Saul Ryan’s family enterprise prides itself on supporting the community and cutting-edge medical research – and it’s both vital and personal.
In this first A Different Lens Live, an online panel of leading Monash academics discusses your burning questions about where to next regarding the coronavirus.
Research into snake venom pivoted from Alzheimer's disease to COVID-19 when the coronavirus reared its head.
Until we truly know what we're fighting, loosening COVID-19 restrictions and resuming our previous normal lives could be a mistake.
Combating a virus that can cause disease and life-threatening transplant complications is the focus of Eureka Prize-winning research.
A simple nasal spray may help control appetite, burn fat and reduce weight.
A pregnancy hormone may provide the first effective treatment in combating the silicosis epidemic.
A bacteria that thrives in compost and manure is being groomed to take the fight to superbugs.
A new study reveals the lives of human ancestors who died millions of years ago.
There is no life without enzymes. But how did the evolution of these complex molecules get going more than three billion years ago? We describe a new mechanism that may help to understand how order is created from disorder, and the starting points for protein evolution.
Nursing homes are coming under the spotlight in the ongoing antimicrobial resistance war.
Antimicrobial resistance is a global crisis that threatens to take us back to a pre-penicillin era.
Vaccination may one day allow coeliac disease sufferers to have their cake and eat it, too – but many questions remain unanswered.
Despite dire warnings of a looming antibiotic resistance crisis, the issue has failed to capture the public imagination.
After a horrific 2017 flu season, there's more interest than ever in developing a better, more universal vaccine. T-cells might hold the answer.
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