
CEDNIK Syndrome: how SNAP29 gene mutation brought the never sleeping cellular city to a halt.
Discover how the SNAP29 gene guides cellular traffic, and how its mutation leads to CEDNIK syndrome, affecting brain, nerves, and skin.
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Discover how the SNAP29 gene guides cellular traffic, and how its mutation leads to CEDNIK syndrome, affecting brain, nerves, and skin.

Healthcare is changing faster than ever before. Thanks to breakthroughs in artificial intelligence (AI), genomics, and wearable technology, medicine is entering the era of smart health, where data, devices, and biology work together to create care tailored to the individual.

Too big, it hits your throat. Too small, you exhale it. The sweet spot delivers drugs exactly where they're needed.

Bacterial lysates and postbiotics can train your immune system to prevent respiratory infections. Here is why they matter in the era of antibiotic resistance.

Have you ever intended to check a single notification, only to realize forty minutes have vanished into an endless scroll? In 2026, privacy is no longer just about your data; it is about your thought process. Is your next choice truly yours, or has a 'Digital Twin' already made it for you

Scientists are closer than ever to detecting life beyond Earth. From Mars to distant exoplanets, modern astronomy is transforming the search for alien life.

Discover how AI surveillance impacts psychological safety in the workplace and why constant monitoring might be killing your team's innovation.

How does one egg form? Inside the fruit fly ovary, discover how cells organize, migrate, and cooperate to turn an egg chamber into one egg—step by step

Antibiotic resistance is making common infections hard to treat. Learn why it happens, how it affects communities in Nigeria and beyond, and what we can do to protect these life-saving medicines.

A low-energy dynamical approach could give companion AI the gift of long-term relational memory - especially valuable for eldercare.

A future without transplant waitlists? Tissue engineering blends biology and engineering to build living, functional human tissue.

You probably know this story: Aurora, also known as the Sleeping Beauty, was a kind princess who was cursed by an angry fairy and fell into a deep sleep for years. On her sixteenth birthday, she pricked her finger, and the spell came true. Silence covered the land, and the entire kingdom fell asleep with her. Years later, the spell could be broken by a kiss from a prince.

The human ear is often described as one of the most sophisticated sensory systems in biology. Within a structure no larger than a seashell, the auditory system can detect frequencies ranging from the faint rumble of distant thunder to the subtle harmonic texture of a violin string

Inhaled antibiotics deliver drugs directly to lung infections, achieving better results with fewer side effects, which is a game-changer in fighting resistance.

This article aims to demystify the anatomy of a clinical trial protocol, peeling back the technical layers to reveal how scientific rigor is converted into medical progress. At ScientistsHub, we often ask: How do we ensure that a medical breakthrough is not just a stroke of luck, but a repeatable, verifiable victory for human health? The answer is found in the design. To truly appreciate the result of any trial, one must first master the architecture of the inquiry.

The dark fantasy adventure “Alice in Wonderland” has gained widespread appreciation among audiences. However, the Alice in Wonderland Syndrome (AWS), a brain-related condition, is not something anyone would ever love to experience or witness.

As a pharmacist during clinical clerking, I frequently encounter patients who use the term “toilet infections” to describe symptoms that clinically align with bacterial vaginosis, urinary tract infections, or yeast infections. This widespread misconception often stems from the assumption that symptoms occurring after the use of public toilets must be caused by them.

How a 150-year-old food industry technique became essential for creating stable biologics and inhaled medicines, transforming liquid drugs into life-saving powders.

The Internet has transformed the world, connecting people, information, and resources in unprecedented ways, even beyond physical boundaries. What began as a small research project has now grown into a global system that supports billions of devices and enables nearly every aspect of modern life. In this article, we will explore the major discoveries and milestones that contributed to the development of the Internet.

Tiny but powerful, basement membranes support cells, regulate barriers, and drive disease when disrupted—key players in health, aging, and cancer.