News

Early research shows that editing expanding trinucleotide repeats halts the lengthening process that causes neurological ...
Broad Institute researchers have developed a way to edit the genetic sequences at the root of Huntington's disease and ...
“We found horses developed a unique gene mutation to make it possible.” The Baltimore Banner thanks its sponsors. Become one. Millions of years ago, horses were the size of dogs and struggled to ...
Modern-day HIV treatments may stem from a genetic mutation dating back to the Viking Age, researchers said. Steinar Engeland via Unsplash On June 5, 1981, the Centers for Disease Control and ...
Bioengineers from UC San Diego developed a simple technique of using bacteria as living test tubes to study human gene mutations and rapidly screen chemicals for their potential drug use. Image credit ...
In Roblox Grow a Garden, players can only get the Moonlit mutation on their plants during a Night event. Placing a Night Staff near the plants at night can guarantee this mutation on six of them.
Modern HIV medicine is based on a common genetic mutation. Now, researchers have traced where and when the mutation arose -- and how it protected our ancestors from ancient diseases. Modern HIV ...
Some lucky people have rare genetic mutations that enable them to feel well-rested after just four hours of sleep, while the rest of us need around eight hours to function. Now, researchers have ...
Some lucky people have rare genetic mutations that enable them to feel well-rested after just four hours of sleep, while the rest of us need around eight hours to function. Now, researchers have ...
A newly identified mutation helps super-sleepers get by on just four to six hours of shut-eye per night, while the rest of us need around eight hours. Researchers described the SIK3-N783Y mutation ...
The answer to the question 'how much sleep do I need each night?' depends on a variety of factors, and we just found a new one: a rare mutation in the SIK3 gene that seems to enable the brain to ...
The researchers found that a single mutation in the virus’s spike protein was enough to prevent it from attaching to human and horse cells. The mutation, however, still allowed the virus to enter and ...