GMOs safe but food producers not educating consumers on benefits

Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) are the future of the world’s food supply. But America’s GMO producers — including growers in ...

Nobel laureate in medicine: GMOs are ‘key tool’ to address global hunger

Richard Roberts | 
Each year several million children either die or suffer irreparable developmental defects because of vitamin A deficiency. Countless others are harmed ...

Non-celiac gluten senstivity disproven in experiment

Tim De Chant | 
By now, you’ve probably heard of gluten-free diets. They’re a necessity for the estimated 2 million Americans with celiac disease ...

Ancient remedy, silver, offers promise where antibiotics fail

Deborah Blum | 
Several years ago, a mosquito bite on Elizabeth Loboa’s right leg became infected, turning into an oozing sore that refused ...

Modern techniques don’t change the fact that humans have genetically engineered plants and animals for centuries

Rachel Mitchell | 
Genetically modified plants and animals are often feared as "Frankenfoods," but is there really anything dangerously new about manipulation of ...
openworm

Building a virtual organism from the ground up–Let’s start with worms

Kenrick Vezina | 
The OpenWorm project wants you to help you build the world's first complete virtual organism so we can better understand ...

Future GM foods like wheat, rice and salmon face even greater hurdles than today’s GM corn or soy

Angela Hensel | 
For many corn and soybean farmers in the U.S., the new normal is to plant genetically modified crops. But considering how ...
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Kevin Folta’s GMO primer: Genetic modification in crops is simply precision breeding

Kevin Folta | 
Eleven years ago when I began my career as a professor at the University of Florida, I would enjoy the sunny drives downstate from Gainesville ...
Mike Adams

First Amendment: Scientists on libel threat against Forbes, GLP by NaturalNews’ Mike Adams

XiaoZhi Lim | 
Alternative health cyber salesman Mike Adams has threatened to sue GLP director Jon Entine over an investigative profile published in ...

Why not destroy all small pox samples? Threat of synthetic recreation one reason

Susannah Locke | 
When the world eradicated smallpox in 1980, it was the first — and still only — time that people have ...

11 agricultural technologies that can safeguard food supply under climate change conditions

Howard Mingh | 
While the recently published Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report warns that the worst effects of climate change are yet ...

Baby’s microbiome may come from mom’s mouth via placenta

Clare Wilson | 
Babies in the womb are not as sheltered from the outside world as you might think. The placenta harbours a ...

Disabling a gene that breaks down insulin may help treat Type 2 diabetes

Heidi Ledford | 
A long-sought target in the treatment of diabetes is coming into focus, as researchers report the discovery of a molecule ...

Did humans evolve to coexist with HPV? New study suggests maybe

In what is believed to be the largest and most detailed genetic analysis of its kind, researchers at NYU Langone ...
Sea Walnut tif

“Aliens of the sea” show there’s more than one way to build a brain

Kenrick Vezina | 
Comb jellies are surreal creatures that are more unique than previously thought; they appear to have evolved their own brains ...
GMO test hero

Views on GMOs shifting: What we fight about when we fight about genetic engineering

Brooke Borel | 
From their very first field test in 1987, GMOs have been the subject of intense debate. Despite the current gridlock ...

Mutation that makes toxic protein responsible for cardiac aging in patients with rare aging disease

Children with progeria, a rare disorder that causes premature aging, die in their teens of ailments that are common in ...

Test for alcoholism identifies booze addicts by genes alone

Chris Pash | 
US researchers have identified 11 genes linked to alcoholism. The genes were tested in three independent human groups and the ...

Appreciating nature’s beauty and symmetry without attributing it to a creator

George Johnson | 
I remember the chill I felt, 27 years ago, when I picked up the latest edition of Scientific American magazine ...
Girls who never grow up offer clues for aging research

Girls who never grow up offer clues for aging research

Virginia Hughes | 
An exceptionally rare genetic disorder causes a handful of girls to never age. Could they offer clues to help us ...

Sequencing cancer genomes, rather than testing specific genes is future of treatment

Kerry Grens | 
In the march toward personalized medicine, genotyping cancers has become more and more complex. Panels that pick up variations in ...

Synthetic bio breakthrough: Flies that make new amino acids

Linda Geddes | 
The genetic code of the fruit fly Drosophila has been hacked into, allowing it to make proteins with properties that ...

Sharks’ immune system proteins may help treat and diagnose cancer

Josh Fischman | 
Sharks and humans last shared a common fishy ancestor about 500 million years ago. Ever since, the two lineages have ...

GM key to battle growing impact of climate change on farming

Jessica Gibbs | 
Climate change is turning farm fields brown in the Midwest and around the world just as global demand for food ...

GM alfalfa’s release in Canada delayed as farmers reject it

Alex Gillis | 
A GM version of alfalfa, a staple in livestock feed, was supposed to be launched in Canada this year. The ...
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We can read your DNA … but how well can we understand it?

Kenrick Vezina | 
The Boston Globe's Carolyn Johnson has penned an important reminder that "the facts about your genes are not necessarily facts ...

National Geographic ignoring crop biotechnology in ‘Future of Food’ series

R Madhavan | 
Although it’s headquartered in the United States, National Geographic is a global publication. For more than 25 years, I’ve read it here ...
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