Texas A&M researchers found a way to make stem cells produce double the normal number of mitochondria using nanoflower particles. These energized stem cells then transfer their surplus “power packs” to weakened cells, reviving their energy production and resilience. The method bypasses many limitations of current mitochondrial therapies and could offer long-lasting effects. It may open the door to treatments for aging tissues and multiple degenerative diseases.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/11/251126095020.htm
Committed skeptic finds himself warming to new Amazon AI products that
actually don't suck
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If you live long enough, you'll wake up one day and find that you're living
in a world you no longer understand. Lately there are things happening with
AI ...
6 hours ago
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