It goes as far back as the Assyrians who documented the use of willow leaves for rheumatic inflammation on stone tablets during the Sumerian period, around 2000 BCE. They found that willow leaves and bark reduced fevers and inflammation. Willows naturally produce salicylic acid in response to stress and to help fight against bacterial infection. It’s an anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial …
Read More »
Together, we reach farther into the Canadian Science community.
We deliver comprehensive content tailored to laboratory and biotechnology professionals.
Recent Posts
Searching for the needle in a haystack: Exploring chemical structures in natural products
By Jana Manolakos Joy Cummings Photo UNB Resolute is one way to describe Christopher Gray. A member of the Natural Products Research Group and Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of New Brunswick (UNB), Gray is on a relentless, lifelong search for new molecules, that in the distant future, might hold the key to new therapeutic drugs. He’s searching …
Read More »Prairies to Pharmacy
By TREVOR KENNEY Southern Alberta’s vast prairies can often harsh be and unforgiving. Windswept and prone to temperature extremes of 35 C during baked dry summer months and -35 C in the bone-chilling winter, its landscape is still surprisingly rich in flora, producing an array of hearty plants that are just now being recognized for their unique properties of medical …
Read More »When one becomes four: A lifesaving, simple solution to the ventilator shortage
By JANA MANOLAKOS In the face of a critical shortage of ventilators during the COVID-19 pandemic, a team of physicians and engineers from the University of Calgary have developed an award-winning device that safely increases available machines at a low cost.The Valence InVent Xtend allows a single ventilator to provide air for up to four patients, with the capability of …
Read More »With diabetes on the rise, meet two Canadian research teams looking for answers in nature
By Jana Manolakos There’s no sugarcoating it. Diabetes is growing at an alarming rate in Canada, afflicting one in three Canadians. It’s particularly worrisome for Canada’s First Nations and Inuit populations, where rates of diabetes on some reserves are three to five times higher than the general population.In the face of this threat, two leading Canadian scientists and their teams …
Read More »The power of plants to ‘grow’ low-cost, high value drugs
By Jana Manolakos While medicines have been extracted from plants for centuries, plants and plant cell systems today can be genetically engineered to serve as drug-producing factories for a range of antibodies and other protein-based therapeutics and vaccines.At the forefront stands Canadian biopharmaceutical company PlantForm, which is harnessing plants for cost-effective therapeutic drugs for cancer and other life-threatening conditions — …
Read More »The Booming Business of Pot Research
Ongoing research into cannabis in the public sector, coupled with both the emergence of large cannabis corporations and a newfound interest in the power of cannabinoids within the pharmaceuticals sector, is increasingly translating into exciting research that aims to close the gap between the many anecdotal uses for medical cannabis and what the science shows. And plenty are interested in …
Read More »Nature’s Pharmacy: Ongoing research unlocking and changing the secrets of cannabis
By Kieran Delamont The cannabis plant, even today, offers us a pathway into a world of mysteries and questions. Thousands of years of both formal and informal human use, much of it set against a backdrop of prohibition, has caused the plant to evolve from a naturally occurring landrace shrub in central Asia to what it has become today: an …
Read More »A trailblazing marine biologist
Emily Choy is the first female Explorer-in-Residence for the Royal Canadian Geographical Society.
Read More »Enriching Canada’s research tapestry with Indigenous science and knowledge
Seven initiatives that are connecting with Indigenous communities.
Read More »University of Toronto startup Winterlight Labs detects early signs of brain disorders in the way we speak
Finding the clues to detect neurodegenerative conditions, using AI.
Read More »Sanofi leads in Canada’s vaccine race
Sanofi, Moderna and others break ground to develop new cures in Canada.
Read More »Harnessing curiosity to uncover the holy grail of immunology
These landmark discoveries, combined with those of his peers, have paved the way for research teams to battle cancer through immunotherapy.
Read More »DNA barcoding critical in tracking and understanding new fungal skin infections
Richard Summerbell, of Sporometrics Inc., uses DNA barcoding to track new fungal infections.
Read More »Breaking Barriers for Black Scientists
Maydianne Andrade and the Canadian Black Scientists Network.
Read More »-
Searching for the needle in a haystack: Exploring chemical structures in natural products
By Jana Manolakos Joy Cummings Photo UNB Resolute is one way to describe Christopher Gray. …
Read More » -
DNA barcoding critical in tracking and understanding new fungal skin infections
-
Farming smarter
-
The burning question: How to build better batteries
-
Making fuel from fumes
-
Prairies to Pharmacy
By TREVOR KENNEY Southern Alberta’s vast prairies can often harsh be and unforgiving. Windswept and …
Read More » -
The power of plants to ‘grow’ low-cost, high value drugs
-
University of Toronto startup Winterlight Labs detects early signs of brain disorders in the way we speak
-
Sanofi leads in Canada’s vaccine race
-
Engineering Biology Agri-food Innovation Centre
BioLab Business Magazine Together, we reach farther into the Canadian Science community










