The ability to correct disease-causing genetic mistakes using genome editors holds great promise in medicine, but it is not without risk.
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Have you ever wondered how cancer begins? Scientists in Australia have discovered something new that might help explain it. Researchers at Flinders University have been studying small pieces in our cells called circular RNAs. These circular RNAs are bits of genetic material that, unlike regular RNA, form loops. What the researchers found is surprising—they may […] The post Our DNA holds the key to cancer development appeared first on Knowridge Science Report.
The ability to correct disease-causing genetic mistakes using genome editors holds great promise in medicine, but it is not without risk.
A new study from researchers at Gladstone Institutes and UC San Francisco has uncovered surprising insights into how the brain’s support cells—not...
Cancer is the leading cause of disease-related death in childhood. This is in part due to cancer-associated genes called oncogenes that can be found...
Researchers from Flinders University in Australia and the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) in Japan have developed a new and more...
Researchers from Flinders University in Australia and the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) in Japan have developed a new and more...
A recent study from Yale University has given scientists and the public a clearer picture of what drives DNA changes that can lead to cancer. The...
A recent study from Yale University has given scientists and the public a clearer picture of what drives DNA changes that can lead to cancer. The...
A new genetic study has found that the first Americans carried DNA from Denisovans, an ancient human species that resided in Asia more than 30,000...
A new genetic study has found that the first Americans carried DNA from Denisovans, an ancient human species that resided in Asia more than 30,000...
Imagine a world where your TV remote, wireless keyboard, home alarm, or smart sensors never need new batteries. That future may be closer than you...