In a stunning display of circular thinking, a leading science writer ends her paean to genetically engineering wild animals by writing: “Humans are the ones driving biodiversity loss of all species.
Some of the most expensive drugs currently in use are gene therapies to treat specific diseases, and their high cost limits ...
From CRISPR to gene banking, synthetic biology has big implications for wildlife evolution and conservation, but ethical ...
The cell therapy field has long held a transformative ambition: to create "off-the-shelf" treatments that can reach not just ...
We are now in the second great wave of the genetic revolution, not defined by reading the human code of life, but by rewriting it.
Seven years after the first gene-edited babies were revealed, biotech startup Manhattan Genomics is reviving the idea of ...
Beijing Tsingke Biotech Co., Ltd., a pioneer in molecular manufacturing, showcased its next-generation integrated ...
Now, research from Northwestern Engineering’s Vadim Backman reveals ... the geometric code helps cells store and process information. “Rather than a predetermined script based on fixed genetic ...
A new UTEP course called “Monster-ology” will connect science and literary analysis through different media to help students ...
Advances in cancer immunotherapy from immune checkpoint modulation to adoptive cell transfer of tumour-infiltrating ...
A single mutation in the YFT3 gene turns tomatoes yellow by disrupting a crucial pigment-producing enzyme. Researchers have discovered that a single genetic change in the YFT3 gene disrupts a vital ...
Traditional breeding and genetic modification methods have struggled to keep pace with the rapid evolution of plant viruses. CRISPR/Cas systems, originally derived from bacterial immune responses, ...