Unveiling a new chapter in the understanding of human genetics, scientists have discovered a hidden geometric code within our ...
Understanding how cells turn genes on and off is one of biology's most enduring mysteries. Now, a new technology developed by chemist Brian Liau and his collaborators at Harvard offers an ...
Everyone knows that the fall brings flu season, replete with aches, pains and a new version of the vaccine. But why is cold ...
Native to the arctic waters of the northern hemisphere, the Bowhead whale can live for centuries, and now scientists think ...
Learn more about bowhead whales and how they routinely see out their 200th birthday — and this DNA-repair protein might just ...
As humans prepare for longer missions to the moon and Mars, scientists are trying to understand how space affects the human ...
At the iGEM competition in Paris, high school and collegiate teams from around the world compete against one another with ...
UCB (Euronext Brussels: UCB), a global biopharmaceutical company, today announced that KYGEVVI® has been granted approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of adults and ...
SDSC provides high-performance computing and data infrastructure that support researchers doing molecular modeling and ...
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.
Scientists from Duke-NUS Medical School and their collaborators have created one of the most comprehensive single cell maps of the developing human brain. The atlas captures nearly every cell type, ...