Scientists in China have found a new coronavirus in bats that could possibly infect humans, but the risk remains low for now.
"An epic exploration of possibilities. What If is a Webby Award-winning science web series that takes you on a journey ...
A University of Glasgow chemist describes how Covid-19 helped establish the principle of chemputation and spur a chemistry ...
A new coronavirus lineage discovered in bats by Wuhan scientists can infect human cells but is not a current public health ...
A Chinese team has found a new bat coronavirus that carries the risk of animal-to-human transmission because it uses the same human receptor as the virus that causes Covid-19. The study was led by ...
Chinese virologists have identified a new bat coronavirus using the same human receptor as COVID-19, potentially allowing animal-to-human transmission. The discovery led by Shi Zhengli, from the Wuhan ...
The ChAdOx1 viral vector was developed at the University of Oxford and has been investigated as a potential vector for ...
Lockdown gave a young chemistry professor in China the space and time to consider the most worthwhile projects, and that has ...
Drew Weissman warns that a rise in anti-vaxxers could lead to deaths from preventable diseases like measles and polio, ...
New research published in Cell found a bat-infecting coronavirus can enter human cells in a similar way to COVID-19. Dr Samuel Ellis, Research Fellow, Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health ...