A new technique for converting adult cells to stem cells avoids dangerous mutations in cell DNA (p. 8)
Found in: Genes & Cells
Men who father children with multiple women are responsible for “extra” diversity on the X chromosome, a new study of six different populations suggests. (p. 8)
Found in: Genes & Cells
Nanoparticles can be designed for targeted delivery of drugs or genes into the body. New work reveals details of how blood proteins respond to these particles.
Published:
2008-09-22 17:18:15
Found in: Genes & Cells
Draft rules lay out policies for approving altered animals, including those used for food.
Published:
2008-09-19 17:20:42
Found in: Genes & Cells
An omega-7 fatty acid made by fat and liver cells acts as a hormone, even mimicking the health benefits of insulin. (p. 15)
Found in: Genes & Cells
A FOXI3 mutation makes some dogs bald.
Published:
2008-09-11 13:39:34
Found in: Genes & Cells and Life
The regulation of genes, rather than genes alone, may have been crucial to primate evolution.
Found in: Genes & Cells
A common gene variation in men is linked to marital crises and less bonding in a study of more than 500 long-term couples.
Found in: Behavior and Genes & Cells
GOTHENBURG,
Sweden —Woody
Allen might have coined it: the law of conservation of fragility. If part of a
biological network gets stronger, some other part is bound to get weaker, new
research shows. Its total fragility never gets better or worse, it just stays
the same.
Rather than being a statement of pessimism, this new law of
conservation offers hope for finding better drug targets to treat diseases such
as diabetes, heart disease and cancer, according to research presented by Hans
V. Westerhoff, systems biologist at the Manchester Centre for Integrative
Systems Biol...
Published:
2008-08-25 10:37:18
Found in: Genes & Cells
Yeast cells fed a calorie-restricted diet live longer and have just as much energy as those fed a normal diet.
Published:
2008-08-25 17:42:03
Found in: Genes & Cells