
Science of 'Protein Origami' Unfolds
• Tanya Lewis via LiveScience.comThere's now a way to make "protein origami" — self-assembling shapes made of twisted molecular strands— a new study reveals.
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There's now a way to make "protein origami" — self-assembling shapes made of twisted molecular strands— a new study reveals.
On the flight deck of the HSV 2 Swift, U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Sinclair Harris received instructions Friday on how to launch the 13-pound drone that looks like a model airplane built by a teenager in the family garage.
A hepatitis C drug combination from Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD) and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMY) cured all patients in a trial, demonstrating the success of a cocktail that may never be approved.
In the U.S., how the government approaches drugs has very little to do with science. The War on Drugs has put the focus on incarceration and enforcement, not on the public health aspects of addiction.
America's drug czar has announced that the nation's drug policy should be governed by neuroscience, not politics.
Drug researchers go along on a stochastic voyage.
If you're over 21, marijuana is legal to smoke and have in possession (under 1 ounce) here in the state of Washington. Many users do so for the effects the THC found in marijuana has on the body. THC is the substance in marijuana that gets you "felli
One man's experience with LED grow lights
Pot magazine High Times held its annual Cannabis Cup this past weekend in Denver.
This is the first study to compare smoking marijuana and pills that contain the psychoactive chemical in the plant.
A pill form of marijuana may work just as well to relieve pain as the smoked form, but with fewer side effects, new research suggests.
We recently had the chance to chat with Ethan Nadelmann, founder and executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, an organization that has been at the forefront of the country's marijuana legalization and decriminalization efforts.
This is the first study to compare smoking marijuana and pills that contain the psychoactive chemical in the plant.
A startup called Catabasis is developing drugs that hit diseases at multiple targets.
The accelerating legalization of marijuana has brought about an entirely new, legal industry around the drug.
Researchers are plugging in smokers, alcoholics, and even crack addicts to expose them to a relapse environment--and teach them how to deal with it. Will it work?
The nation's research-grade cannabis is controlled by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, whose mission to curb use is at odds with that of researchers looking to study pot's therapeutic properties.
Catapults, cannons, submarines, and more!
Related: Can cats get high on marijuana?
How one New York bartender fused alcohol and marijuana forever
For the first time since the 1970s, researchers are being allowed to study the potential medical properties of the most tightly controlled substances around. But it's not easy.
How one New York bartender fused alcohol and marijuana forever
For the first time since the 1970s, researchers are being allowed to study the potential medical properties of the most tightly controlled substances around. But it's not easy.
The FDA decision extends Purdue Pharma LP's patent protection of OxyContin for at least another year, if not much longer. The blockbuster pain drug racked up sales of $2.8 billion last year. By blocking generic entrants, the FDA will reward companies
Nevada voters approved medical marijuana at the polls, placing it in the state constitution in the year 2000 and instructing “The Legislature shall provide by law for … appropriate methods for supply of the plant to patients authorized to use it.”
On the morning of May 3, 2010, three agents of the Food and Drug Administration descended upon the Houston office of Cetero Research, a firm that conducted research for drug companies worldwide.
Opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan is expected to increase for a third straight year, expanding even to poppy-free areas this year, a United Nations report warned on Monday.
From Reefer Madness to Nancy Reagan's famous "Just Say No," we're constantly trying to convince kids that drugs aren't as fun as they think they are.
Thanks to extensive genetic engineering, drugmakers can now brew large vats of the malaria drug artemisinin, stabilizing the world supply.
US scientists on Wednesday said they had used baker’s yeast to make a key ingredient of malaria drugs, a feat that could iron out fluctuations in supply caused by sourcing the chemical from a Chinese herb.