Researchers say they have successfully cultivated animal cells that draw energy through photosynthesis. Previously believed ...
Too much of a good thing is no good at all. Living organisms enjoy sunlight—in fact, they need it to stay alive—but they tend ...
The next step—ensuring chloroplasts can survive longer in animal cells. In the study, the researchers inserted energy-making ...
Plant cells have several structures not found in other eukaryotes. In particular, organelles called chloroplasts allow plants to capture the energy of the Sun in energy-rich molecules; cell walls ...
Too much of a good thing is no good at all. Living organisms enjoy sunlight – in fact, they need it to stay alive – but they ...
The team inserted chloroplasts from red algae into cultured cells derived from hamsters. The researchers examined the structure of the chloroplasts within the cells via several imaging techniques ...
For the first time, scientists have created animal cells that can harness sunlight for energy—a feat once thought ...
Many experts believed it couldn't be done, but researchers in Japan have successfully introduced chloroplasts into hamster cells.
The team inserted chloroplasts from red algae into cultured cells derived from hamsters. The researchers examined the structure of the chloroplasts within the cells via several imaging techniques ...
The chloroplasts were sourced from red algae, while the animal cells were cultured from hamsters. Previous studies had found success in transplanting chloroplasts into yeast, granting them the new ...