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Volume 26 Issue 4, April 2008

Transmission electron micrograph of pancreatic tissue showing an islet of Langerhans cell (right) containing hormone secretory granules (small blue dots) and an acinar cell (left). Baetge and colleagues (p 443) describe the generation of glucose-responsive insulin-secreting cells from human embryonic stem cells. Credit: Steve Gschmeissner, Science Photo Library.

Editorial

  • Global health initiatives should place greater emphasis on mechanisms for encouraging small and medium-sized biotech enterprises to participate in the fight against neglected diseases.

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  • A patent attorney relies on guts, smarts and 'deep throats' to take on what he considers a broken patent system.

    • Crispin Littlehales
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News Feature

  • From yeast to mice, limiting food intake slows aging and extends lifespan. Activators of the sirtuins, enzymes famously linked to this process, promise a wealth of new drugs—but the sirtuin hypothesis is now coming under fire. Ken Garber reports.

    • Ken Garber
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Careers and Recruitment

  • St. Louis wants to become a hub of agricultural biotechnology. All it needs is more start-ups and funds.

    • Emma Marris
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