Gene expression analysis is undergoing a profound transformation, driven by the rapid evolution of advanced omics technologies. From single-cell ...
Morning Overview on MSN
DNA shape and stiffness steer key gene regulators
For decades, biologists treated DNA as a static string of letters, a linear code that cells read like text on a page. A new ...
El Mundo on MSN
Maria's extraordinary 'superpower': she has been keeping HIV at bay for 42 years without any medication
This Catalan woman is part of a small and extraordinary group, known as 'exceptional elite controllers', individuals who ...
Diabetes mellitus (DM) continues to be one of the most prevalent and complex metabolic diseases globally, affecting ...
A new study, led by the University of Vienna and the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven, shows how the eyes of adult ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Epigenetic drift explains why the aging intestine becomes more vulnerable to cancer
Researchers from the Leibniz Institute on Aging - Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI) in Jena, Germany, the Molecular Biotechnology ...
1don MSN
Using 1,000 butterfly and moth genomes to investigate evolution and climate change resilience
A major milestone has been reached, with experts across Europe, including those at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Cambridge, UK, sequencing 1,000 species of butterflies and moths. This includes ...
A new study, led by the University of Vienna and the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven, shows how the eyes of adult ...
The number of deaths caused by prion diseases reaches about 30,000 annually. Only 5 months pass from the diagnosis of seemingly healthy patients to the fatal outcome of this neurodegenerative ...
Epigenetic regulation plays a central role in shaping the molecular landscape of cancer. Beyond permanent genetic mutations, epigenetic changes provide a ...
Research is important to us for many reasons. Sometimes, for example, research results in a new treatment (e.g., Alexander ...
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has expanded beyond its initial confines of early industrialised countries in North America, Europe, and Oceania and now constitutes a global illness. Once rare in the ...
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