A protein called COUP-TFII determines whether a mouse embryo develops a male reproductive tract, according to new research. The discovery changes the long-standing belief that an embryo will ...
“Although the idea of ‘glowing sperm’ may sound unusual, the underlying objective is highly practical,” says Dr. Hisanori Fukunaga of Hokkaido University. He is referring to a new model his team has ...
New research challenges the 'bigger is better' mentality, revealing that increased male body size and fat mass are linked to declining reproductive health and fertility. Studies show higher body fat ...
A protein called COUP-TFII determines whether a mouse embryo develops a male reproductive tract, according to researchers at the National Institutes of Health and their colleagues at Baylor College of ...
A new platform could improve reproductive toxicity testing by enhancing both efficiency and ethical standards Mice are commonly used in reproductive ...