ScienceLink artikelen in C2W international 1, 2022
View all stories from this issue.
-
English
Cryo-EM reveals new details about RNA origami
Researchers at Aarhus University have used cryo-EM to gain a better understanding of the folding process that dictates RNA origami.
-
English
Synthetic immune receptors speed disease resistance in crops
Plants lack the ability to develop antibodies against a new virus. British researchers present a new concept: synthetic immune receptors ‘on demand’.
-
English
Non-target screening: the art of looking at everything
KWR Water Research Institute uses state-of-the-art high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) to simultaneously examine as many substances as possible.
-
English
Safe tattoo ink hurts (entrepreneurs) a lot
Dutch tattoo parlours are currently desperate for REACH-compliant tattoo ink. Since 4 January, their old ink inventory has become unusable, and the alternative is still a long way off.
-
English
‘Don’t forget that plastic also contributes to a more sustainable world’
Since October 2021 Gijs Langeveld is behind the wheel at the Polymer Science Park. How does he see the future of the PSP under his leadership?
-
English
New more dangerous HIV variant discovered in the Netherlands
A variant of the HIV-1 subtype-B that is more infectious and virulent than previously known variants has been circulating in the Netherlands for twenty years.
-
English
‘Many basic aspects of chemistry come together in glycochemistry’
Winning two prizes in one month is not a given for every scientist, especially not this early in a career. But you have to push glycochemist Marthe Walvoort pretty hard to make her say ‘I am proud’. She particularly emphasises the importance of a stimulating environment for success.
-
English
Quantum effects in biology: a load of rubbish or the only explanation?
Entanglement, tunnelling and coherence may also do their work in the warm, messy environment of the biological cell.
-
English
‘We did not expect to see this within our scientific career’
Science and Nature consider the prediction of protein folding with artificial intelligence to be the scientific breakthrough of 2021.
-
English
Catalyst model overhauled
Oxidised metals also appear to be able to take on an active role as catalysts for CO2 conversion, contrary to what scientists had previously thought.