Patrick Barry

All Stories by Patrick Barry

  1. Health & Medicine

    Putting tumors on pause

    Keeping benign breast tumors from progressing into a malignant cancer can be achieved in mice by reducing a signaling protein.

  2. Earth

    Folding with a little help from friends

    By slowly unraveling a protein, scientists have shown how other proteins called chaperones influence protein folding.

  3. Hold the Embryos: Genes turn skin into stem cells

    Scientists have found a way to convert a person's skin cells directly into stem cells without creating and destroying embryos.

  4. Ladies First: Genes skew sex ratios in evolutionary struggle

    A gene in fruit flies favors the birth of females, until another gene comes along to restore balance between the sexes.

  5. Doing the DNA shuffle

    DNA near the ends of people's chromosomes shows surprisingly large differences from the corresponding DNA in other great apes.

  6. Health & Medicine

    Nongene DNA boosts AIDS risk

    People with a newly discovered genetic variation are more vulnerable to HIV infection.

  7. Humans

    Burdens of knowledge

    Greater understanding of the role of genetics in human diseases presents scientists with ethical dilemmas.

  8. Extreme Healing: Protein aids limb regrowth in newts

    The ability of newts to regenerate severed limbs depends crucially on a protein released by the insulating sheath around nerves.

  9. Health & Medicine

    Regulating Muscle Decline: Small molecules linked to degenerative diseases

    Snippets of RNA that regulate gene activity play a role in muscle-wasting diseases such as muscular dystrophy.

  10. Stem Cells from Virgin Eggs

    Making embryonic stem cells from unfertilized eggs might bypass many ethical concerns, but important scientific hurdles remain.

  11. Emotional memory

    The action of a stress hormone could be why emotionally charged events form especially vivid and durable memories.

  12. Bacteria thrive by freeloading

    Mutant bacteria thrive by freeloading off their hard-working kin, but these slackers revert to working normally if they become too numerous.