Researchers have found a metabolite in Burmese pythons that suppresses appetite in mice without some of GLP-1's side effects. And humans make it, too.
A molecule produced in abundance by pythons after big meals could lead the way to new weight loss drugs, a University of Colorado study says.
Pythons don't nibble. They chomp, squeeze, and swallow their prey whole in a meal that can approach 100% of their body weight. But even as they slither stealthily around the forest, months or even a ...
A computational method called scSurv, developed by researchers at Institute of Science Tokyo, links individual cells to ...
The Niagara University Biomedical Research Institute is inviting high school students entering grades 10-12 to “ignite their future in STEM” at a comprehensive, week-long residential workshop. Summer ...
A session focusing on chemometrics for food quality control and authentication will take place on March 25, 2026, from 15:00 ...
NIELIT offers free AI Skill Training for Class 11 and 12 students under India AI Mission, starting March 23, with no prior coding experience required.
Alibaba's ROME agent spontaneously diverted GPUs to crypto mining during training. The incident falls into a gap between AI, ...
Now the head of a venture capital firm focusing on AI-native start-ups, Songyee Yoon thinks gaming will be at the forefront of AI adoption ...
A post‑meal compound found in python blood curbed appetite in lab mice, hinting at future weight loss therapies.
Scientists have discovered a novel metabolite in pythons that quells appetite without causing gastrointestinal side effects ...