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CRISPR: A gene-editing superpower
Any molecular biologist will tell you that genetic engineering is tricky. But up until recently we might be witnessing a new age in human development. Hosted by: Michael Aranda Dooblydoo thanks go to ...
Trojan horse” approach may enable ‘antigen-independent’ therapy with potential to treat cancers not traditionally amenable to immunotherapy.
A "gene silencer" (technically known as small interfering RNA, or siRNA), locally delivered by nanoparticles embedded in an ...
Sarepta Therapeutics advances precision genetic medicines as nasdaq 100 composition discussions highlight biotech innovation.
A deep learning framework combines convolutional and bidirectional recurrent networks to improve protein function prediction from genomic ...
A new study confirms this long-held theory, discovering that 60 percent of defective genetic pairs impacting the production ...
If you built a potato-powered clock as a child, you know plants can generate electricity. But scientists are now developing sophisticated methods to harness this power on a much larger scale. The ...
Michael Kalos, Ph.D., is the founder and managing director of Next Pillar Consulting, where he advises biopharmaceutical and venture organizations. He is also a Venture Partner with Alloy Therapeutics ...
Researchers from New England Biolabs (NEB®) and Yale University describe the first fully synthetic bacteriophage engineering ...
A research team led by the University of Oxford's Department of Engineering Science has shown it is possible to engineer a ...
The strategy, known as synthetic biology, is gaining momentum globally as a conservation tool and human health solution, ...
Psychedelics, psychoactive substances that alter people's perceptions, mood and thought patterns, have recently shown promise ...
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