Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists uncover DNA’s hidden geometric memory code
Unveiling a new chapter in the understanding of human genetics, scientists have discovered a hidden geometric code within our ...
In a world first, a bespoke gene-editing therapy benefited one child. Now researchers plan to launch a clinical trial of the approach ...
IEEE Spectrum on MSN
Inside the Massive Effort to Sequence All of Europe’s Lepidoptera
It’s a little after 6:30 on a brisk July morning in a stone hut high in the Italian Alps. A gently hissing wood fire is ...
There's a long-standing debate in the wild ramp community, with one faction arguing that there is only one species of the ...
US food tech startup The Every Company has raised $55M in Series D funding to expand its precision-fermented egg proteins, ...
Expanded Dose Exploration in Part A and Dose Escalation in Part B of BEAM-302 Phase 1/2 Study in Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Ongoing; Updated ...
There's a long-standing debate in the wild ramp community, with one faction arguing that there is only one species of the ...
Nearly a dozen underwater structures deployed off Guam’s coasts eight years ago have revealed a trove of marine life invisible to most divers, including species never before recorded in island ...
Every cell in the body has the same DNA, but different cell types—such as muscle or brain cells—use different parts of it.
Michael Buck, PhD, professor of biochemistry in the Jacobs School, recently received NIH funding to explore how molecular readers of DNA access and activate seemingly hidden genes.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine alumnus and former faculty member Hamilton O. Smith, M.D., whose 1978 Nobel Prize-winning discovery of restriction enzymes revolutionized genetic ...
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