Roche has put forward a new approach to genetic analysis, which it describes as sequencing-by-expansion—a proprietary method that pulls apart the DNA molecule and amplifies the signal of each ...
Imagine you work for a hypothetical gene synthesis company, one of dozens around the world that manufacture tiny strands of custom nucleic acids like DNA for customers in academia and industry. DNA ...
Centuries-old genetic material can solve historical mysteries, from lost species to what killed Napoleon’s army.
When it comes to finding answers, every moment counts—especially in critical care settings like the neonatal and pediatric intensive care units (NICU and PICU). Although rapid genetic tests, whether ...
DNA is often compared to a written language. The metaphor leaps out: Like letters of the alphabet, molecules (the nucleotide bases A, T, C and G, for adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine) are ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Scientists discover tiny parts of DNA that explain why diseases hit people differently
Tiny repeated stretches of DNA in your genome may quietly shape how your body works, how your brain develops and how you ...
With a new study in the journal Cell, researchers at Stanford University and Stockholm University have contributed to ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Discovery of sequence-driven DNA methylation offers new path for epigenetic engineering
All the cells in an organism have the exact same genetic sequence. What differs across cell types is their ...
A study reveals how the essential red blood cell transcription factor KLF1 recognizes DNA. Using precise measurements in test ...
News Medical on MSN
Specific DNA sequences control spinal cord injury response
After a spinal cord injury, cells in the brain and spinal cord change to cope with stress and repair tissue. A new study from Karolinska Institutet, published in Nature Neuroscience, shows that this ...
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