Nautilus debuted its platform at the US HUPO meeting last month and is seeking additional participants for its ongoing early access program.
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet have created the first detailed map showing how genetic activity is controlled in individual cells of the adult human brain and spinal cord. The study, published ...
Discover how CRISPR genome editing is revolutionizing medicine. Learn the science of Cas9, current clinical trials, and the future of gene editing.
Morning Overview on MSN
Study links schizophrenia gene to decision-making, researchers report
Researchers have found statistically significant links between a gene tied to schizophrenia risk and poorer cognitive ...
Cancer’s strongest gene switches push DNA into damaging overdrive, creating repeated breaks and repairs that may fuel tumor ...
Scientists have mapped the genetics of cancer in cats for the first time at scale, uncovering major overlaps with human cancers. Key mutations—like those linked to breast cancer—appear in both species ...
I don’t really see the point of grafting onto him our vision of what he ought to have been doing. I’m interested in trying to ...
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
Denisovans: The human species found first in DNA
Denisovans were first identified from DNA extracted from a finger bone discovered in Denisova Cave in Siberia, revealing a distinct human group closely related to Neanderthals. Later finds, including ...
In statistical fine-mapping, signals stable across stratified subgroups can capture functionally important loci missed by covariate adjustment approaches, and prioritizing agreement between both ...
More than 2.3 million ancient genetic switches discovered in plants reveal how key growth controls endured 300 million years ...
A large international study has mapped the genetic landscape of feline cancers for the first time, revealing striking similarities between tumor-driving mutations in cats, humans, and dogs.
The tiny Amazon molly (Poecilia formosa) has always fascinated researchers because, according to the rules of evolution, it shouldn't have survived as a species, let alone thrive as a species for over ...
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