A new study has developed a powerful computational method that can detect how genes interact with each other to influence ...
Mapping how Narcan reverses opioid overdose can provide a molecular blueprint for developing more effective drugs against ...
Twenty-five years ago, the release of the first complete Arabidopsis thaliana genome marked a pivotal turning point in plant ...
Single-cell genome sequencing techniques have recently emerged, enabling high-throughput transcriptome profiling at the level of individual cells. Among ...
This study presents a valuable tool named TSvelo, a computational framework for RNA velocity inference that models transcriptional regulation and gene-specific splicing. The evidence supporting the ...
Beyond Alzheimer's disease, the findings illuminate fundamental mechanisms of RNA metabolism regulation in neurons. The researchers identified upregulation of transcriptional repressors like YY1 and ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is revolutionising how scientists study cancer and Type 1 diabetes and discover ways to fight them.
Techno-Science.net on MSN
This woolly mammoth enabled sequencing of 40,000-year-old RNA, a record!
The discovery of a juvenile woolly mammoth named Yuka, found in Siberian permafrost with its skin and muscles intact, has already marked paleontological history. A team of scientists has just ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
De-Extinction No Longer Sci-Fi: Ancient Molecule Found in a 40,000-Year-Old Mammoth Pushes Extinct Species Closer to Genetic Revival
Researchers have successfully recovered intact RNA molecules from a woolly mammoth that died nearly 40,000 years ago in Siberia. It is the oldest RNA ever sequenced from an extinct vertebrate—and the ...
It was 2012 when Love Dalén, a paleogeneticist at Stockholm University, first laid eyes upon a special specimen on a lab table in eastern Siberia. "Our Russian collaborators said, 'Come here into this ...
If you live in the United States, odds are high that a tiny passenger rides in your blood. By adulthood, more than 94 percent of people carry Epstein-Barr virus, or EBV, a germ that often spreads ...
Texas A&M researchers found that in an aggressive kidney cancer, RNA builds “droplet hubs” that activate tumor genes. By creating a molecular switch to dissolve these hubs, they stopped cancer growth ...
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