Regional: Retransmission: Stanford Study Points To Vaccine That Protects Against Multiple Infections
Traditionally, vaccines protect against one particular pathogen, but in this study, Stanford Medicine researchers created a vaccine that successfully offered immunity from respiratory viruses, ...
Local News Matters on MSN
Stanford team develops 'universal vaccine' that protects against multiple infections
A new Stanford study marks a big step forward in the creation of a new kind of vaccine that offers protection against a range of infections at once. Traditionally, vaccines protect against one ...
IFLScience on MSN
New type of vaccine could one day give universal protection against colds, flu, COVID – you name it!
In what could be considered a revolutionary breakthrough, scientists have created a “universal” vaccine formula that protects ...
Our immune system spans two worlds—innate and adaptive. Innate immune cells are like troops at the gate ready to hold off invaders and raise the body's alarms. Adaptive immune cells are specialists ...
Researchers suggest a vaccine could replace multiple jabs every year for seasonal respiratory infections and be on hand in the event of a new pandemic.
The immune system can work in two ways: the innate immune system reacts to any foreign invaders that are identified by immune cells that look for such pathogens; but the acquired or adaptive immune ...
Research from Radboud university medical center reveals that T cells from the adaptive immune system can manipulate the memory of innate immune cells. Previously, it was believed that the memory of ...
A new study published in Science suggests a single nasal spray vaccine may protect against colds, flu, bacterial lung ...
Scientists generally agree that eukaryotes, the domain of life whose cells contain nuclei and that includes almost all multicellular organisms, originated from a process involving the symbiotic union ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results