Marwoa Mohamed
8.8K posts

Marwoa Mohamed
@ArchMarwoa
Architect...Photographer..mum... follow your Dream... 🇮🇶🌿🌷🌨️🌊📐📚🌠🌕🚀🌌✈️
Iraq Baghdad Katılım Kasım 2021
739 Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet

@Ravenismeee Don't rush into your crucial decisions... You will lose a lot
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The hydraulic pin holding the tower arm in place did not retract.
If that can be fixed tonight, there will be another launch attempt tomorrow at 5:30 CT.
Elon Musk@elonmusk
Starship V3 first flight countdown starting
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Marwoa Mohamed retweetledi
Marwoa Mohamed retweetledi
Marwoa Mohamed retweetledi

@nicksortor @elonmusk This is so bad... What's the solution...
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A tiny bee just did what chemotherapy couldn't.
Scientists in Australia discovered that honeybee venom can wipe out 100% of aggressive breast cancer cells in under 60 minutes.
And the healthy cells around them? Barely touched.
The breakthrough came from Dr. Ciara Duffy and her team at the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research, working alongside the University of Western Australia.
They tested venom drawn from 312 honeybees and bumblebees across Australia, Ireland, and England.
The target: triple-negative breast cancer and HER2-enriched breast cancer. Two of the deadliest, most stubborn forms of the disease.
The weapon: melittin. The same tiny peptide that makes a bee sting burn.
At one specific dose, melittin tore through cancer cell membranes completely within an hour. Within just 20 minutes, it shut down the chemical signals cancer cells need to grow and multiply.
Bumblebee venom, which lacks melittin, did nothing. Zero effect, even at high concentrations.
Scientists then recreated melittin synthetically in the lab and got almost identical results, meaning no bees need to be harmed to develop the therapy.
Published in the peer-reviewed journal npj Precision Oncology, the findings are still early-stage. Human trials haven't happened yet.
But one thing is clear. Nature has been hiding answers in plain sight all along, sometimes inside the smallest creatures on Earth.
Source: Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research / npj Precision Oncology (Dr. Ciara Duffy et al.)

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