One of the many secrets to bacteria’s success is their ability to defend themselves from viruses, called phages, that infect bacteria and use their cellular machinery to make copies of themselves.
One of the many secrets to bacteria’s success is their ability to defend themselves from viruses, called phages, that infect bacteria and use their cellular machinery to make copies of themselves.
Program in Public Health’s new Center for Health Ethics will explore issues, inform debates and propose policy solutions
The longtime leader of the University Senate at The Ohio State University is retiring.
New research points to an economic factor that might be overlooked when considering why drug-related deaths among Black Americans increased significantly after 2010 in U.S. regions reporting heightened fentanyl activity: job losses that followed the Great Recession.
The Ohio State University Office of Government Affairs has announced that Tom Walsh, a veteran policy expert with extensive experience in higher education policy and over 25 years working around the Statehouse, will join the office as associate vice president for state relations.
Renowned scholar recognized as international expert in the field of stress and coping
Findings may improve prevention and treatment strategies for smoking, vaping habits
Conditions such as diabetes, heart attack and vascular diseases commonly diagnosed in people with spinal cord injuries can be traced to abnormal post-injury neuronal activity that causes abdominal fat tissue compounds to leak and pool in the liver and other organs, a new animal study has found.
A university professor has found a way to help students – and himself – power through long lecture classes: exercise breaks.
Even subtle differences in the wording of social media messages may be enough to sway young people’s beliefs about depression and anxiety and their treatment.