By Grey Moran for Civil Eats. Broadcast version by Danielle Smith for Mississippi News Connection reporting for the Solutions ...
The fungi show potential to target tuberculosis, offering hope of more effective treatments for a disease which still affects thousands of Americans each year.
The idea of trees "talking" to one another through underground fungal networks—the so-called "wood wide web"—has captured the ...
Three compounds isolated from tuberculosis’s fungal foes killed cultured cells of the bacterium that causes the disease in ...
A species of wood-eating fungus didn’t need a brain to pass a cognitive test with flying colors, and researchers say this ...
Dr. Jamal Lewis’s lab is trying to repurpose a fungus to shuttle pharmaceuticals to the central nervous system and treat ...
When things are not going as they should, our body takes it upon itself to give us some clues or signs of those problems.
Fungi from peat bogs produce substances toxic to tuberculosis bacteria, potentially guiding new treatment development.
Researchers have identified two fungal enzymes that hijack the immune system of plants, playing a critical role in the colonization of plant roots. These findings open new avenues for interventions in ...
Mathilde Do Chi is the CEO of Forward Food Law, a food law and regulatory consultancy in global alternative protein ...
A nutritionist shares how the Holistic Way Premium Gold Royal Imperial Lingzhi Blend supports respiratory and cognitive ...
An analysis of fungi collected from peat bogs has identified several species that produce substances toxic to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the bacterium that causes tuberculosis in humans. The ...