A caffeine-triggered switch that turns CRISPR gene editing on and off inside cells could one day improve cancer therapy.
Scientists at Texas A&M are turning an everyday pick-me-up into a high-tech medical switch. By combining caffeine with CRISPR ...
Antibiotic resistance is racing toward a global crisis, with “superbugs” projected to cause over 10 million deaths annually by 2050. Now, scientists at UC San Diego have unveiled a powerful new CRISPR ...
In this GEN webinar Ray Zhang, PhD, associate director, QC-Analytics at Franklin Biolabs will introduce the principles of mass photometry and highlight where it adds value across the analytical ...
Scientists found an unexpected viral hitchhiker lurking inside a common gut bacterium – and it was twice as prevalent in people with colorectal cancer.
Professor Dr. Rex Dunham, has been affiliated with the School of Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aquatic Sciences since 1978, making him the current longest active professor at Auburn University. During ...
RNA therapeutics target translation rather than DNA, aiming to correct shared protein production errors. By enabling cells to read through premature stop codons, engineered tRNAs could restore ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Ghost lineages: The ancient DNA hiding in our genes today?
Fragments of DNA from long-extinct human relatives still circulate in modern genomes, and in some cases they do more than linger. They actively shape how people survive in extreme environments. The ...
In 2021, a technology developed at University of Michigan, called Seq-Scope, revolutionized the ability to map gene activity within intact tissue at ...
Geneticists have a better understanding of how prehistoric pairings unfolded, with new research suggesting they were mostly ...
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