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Searching In features, blog entries, column entries & news items, Under the topic Genes & Cells
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The mathematics of soapy water yields some clues to the origin of the genetic code.Published: Wednesday, June 11th, 2008Found in: Genes & Cells, Numbers and Physics
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When inherited from mom, a gene linked to obesity and diabetes interferes with blood sugar metabolism.Published: Tuesday, June 10th, 2008Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells
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Genes key to the development of modern animals' body plans show up in primitive-looking comb jellies.Published: Friday, June 6th, 2008Found in: Genes & Cells and Life -
The smell of coffee leads to changes in gene activity in sleep-deprived rats, hinting at the molecular basis for the relaxing effect of the aroma seen in experiments.Published: Friday, June 6th, 2008Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells -
Old-fashioned gene hunting wasn’t terribly efficient. Geneticists typically pursued one gene at a time, armed only with guesses—usually wrong—about which chunks of genetic code might be linked to human disease. Geneticists managed to bag a few trophies anyway—genes for Huntington’s chorea and cystic fibrosis, for example—mostly in rare diseases caused by a problem in a single, high-powered gene. Unfortunately, most of the more common diseases, such as type II diabetes, are instead controlled by a whole crowd of gene variants, each playing a small and often subtle rol...Published: June 21st, 2008; Vol.173 #19Found in: Biomedicine and Genes & Cells
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A new 3-D microscopy technique offers unprecedented views of cells.Published: Thursday, June 5th, 2008Found in: Genes & Cells and Life -
Scientists have revealed new details about the genes — and the goo — that enable luminescent bacteria to colonize their symbiotic marine partner.Published: Wednesday, June 4th, 2008Found in: Ecology, Genes & Cells, Life and Zoology -
Using a new method of data analysis, researchers have found that the Americas were peopled in two different migrations.Published: June 21st, 2008; Vol.173 #19Found in: Genes & Cells and Humans -
Deep inside our cells, the DNA that encodes the mysteries of our individuality twines into tidy little spiral staircases neatly side by side — or so we might imagine. Consider, though, that if you scale up the nucleus of a cell to the size of a basketball, each molecule of DNA inside it would resemble fishing line more than four miles long. And now consider what happens to your iPod headphones when you cram them into a pocket: Invariably, it seems, they tangle. And they’re only a foot long! Now you have a picture of the gargantuan task your cells face in managing the ...Published: Friday, May 23rd, 2008Found in: Genes & Cells and Numbers -
Unsuspected, ever-changing variation among stem cells in bone marrow helps determine the development path the cells will follow during differentiation.Published: Wednesday, May 21st, 2008Found in: Biology, Biomedicine and Genes & Cells
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For the first time, scientists have resurrected a piece of DNA from an extinct animal — the Tasmanian tiger. The researchers engineered mice with a piece of the long-gone marsupial's DNA that turns on a collagen gene in cartilage-producing cells.Published: June 7th, 2008; Vol.173 #18Found in: Biology, Genes & Cells, Life and Paleobiology -
Bacteria stick better to rigid surfaces.Published: Monday, May 19th, 2008Found in: Biology and Genes & Cells -
A light microscope with high resolution may enable scientists to view the 3-D structures within living cells.Published: Monday, May 19th, 2008Found in: Biology, Genes & Cells, Physics and Technology -
The Ashwell receptor, a sugar-binding protein on liver cells, helps fight sepsis by clearing blood-clotting factors. The discovery clears up years of mystery surrounding the receptor’s function.Published: Sunday, May 18th, 2008Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells
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New genetic tests to distinguish viable from nonviable embryos may help eliminate risky multiple births from fertility procedures.Published: June 7th, 2008; Vol.173 #18Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells
