hio

Transplant breakthrough? Organs of one species grown inside an animal of another

Alessandra Potenza |
It’s possible to grow organs of one species inside an animal of another species and then transplant that organ to ...
how to keep fruits and vegetables fresh

Will the Arctic Apple usher in a wave of genetically engineered fruits and vegetables?

XiaoZhi Lim |
The non-browning Arctic Apple is the latest food genetically engineered to help tackle the global food waste problem. These types ...
workout

Want a better workout? Company says DNA profiling could help, but scientists skeptical

Kashmira Gander |
[Genetic information] is being harnessed to help both athletes and the average Joe achieve their fitness potentials. ... [H]ealth firm ...
Daisy cow e

‘Super milk’: Offspring of GE cows retain hypoallergenic modifications

Jamie Morton |
In 2012, Daisy the genetically engineered dairy calf made headlines around the world after researchers at AgResearch used a genetic ...
breast cancer

Breast cancer linked to genetic ‘hotspots’ formerly thought to be harmless

Researchers at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute have discovered 'hotspots' of mutations in breast cancer genomes, where mutations thought to ...
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Blacks found genetically more susceptible to opiate addiction, study says

Robert Preidt |
Researchers say they've found a genetic variant associated with opioid addiction, and it might lead to personalized treatment for the ...
lulla saratsis patient

Brain cancer in children: Unique ‘genetic drivers’ open door to precision medical treatments

Emily Mullin |
In the past 30 years, childhood deaths from cancer have declined by 50 percent overall, but those from pediatric brain ...
Teens and the social media

Our Facebook, social media use is influenced by genetics

Nick McDerrmott |
Scientists found our DNA influences how long we spend on Facebook, chat rooms and online gaming. ... A study reveals ...
strand of dna under a magnifying glass

Brains of people with autism share distinct genetic ‘signature’

Nicholette Zeliadt |
The brains of people with autism show a distinct molecular signature, according to the largest-yet postmortem study of people with ...
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Genetics for public health: A lost cause?

Meredith Knight |
Its power for discovering rare diseases is well proven. But genetics’ impact on public and preventative health has a long ...
imrs

Non-browning Arctic Apple hit shelves February 1: Will they change consumers’ opinions about GMOs?

Caitlin Dewey |
The fruit, sold sliced and marketed under the brand Arctic Apple, could hit a cluster of Midwestern grocery stores as ...
American Flag Prescription Pills Drugs Doctor

Will the next FDA commissioner speed up drug approvals?

Alex Tabarrok |
[I]t’s gratifying that all of the people whose names have been floated for FDA Commissioner...[understands] that there is fundamental tradeoff ...
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Racial differences in medicine? Kidney disease disparity in African Americans linked to ‘beneficial’ gene variant

Deepak Chopra, Mark Zeidel |
While kidney disease is widespread, it disproportionately affects certain populations: African Americans and others of recent African ancestry are more ...
schizophrenia

Schizophrenia linked to mutation of memory, sense-of-direction gene

Mutations in a gene that should enable memories and a sense of direction instead can result in imprecise communication between ...
How Neanderthal DNA shaped the human genome

How Neanderthal DNA shaped the human genome

John Capra |
[These excerpts were taken from a New York Times interview with John Anthony Capra, an evolutionary genomics professor.] Geneticists tell ...
thinkstockphotos x

Viruses ‘talk’ with each other to plan attacks on cells

Akshat Rathi |
[Israeli scientists have accidentally] discovered for the first time an instance of viruses leaving messages for other viruses. ... Viruses ...
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US adults wary of gene editing: What does that mean for medicine?

Samir Shah |
The Pew survey revealed that 50 percent of U.S. adults said they would not want genetic editing and 68 percent ...
newborn screening

How much do you really want to know about your baby’s genes, health risks?

Newborn screening is mandatory in most states...However, now that scientists have developed methods for sequencing the entire genome, what would ...
stem cell

4 ways stem cells could change health and medicine

Peter Diamandis |
We are at the cusp of a stem cell revolution. Understanding and harnessing these unique cells may unlock breakthroughs in ...
NHGRI

Whole genome sequencing fuels DNA ‘intelligence revolution’

Gaurav Garg, Mahni Ghorashi |
We’ve entered a new phase in the history of whole genome sequencing (WGS). Consider that researchers at University of Toronto ...
siri talking person

Our voices and smartphones may soon help diagnose diseases and stress disorders

Emily Mullin |
Voice samples are a rich source of information about a person’s health, and researchers think subtle vocal cues may indicate ...
US wide

Stem cell therapy shows promise in toddler with Down syndrome

IANS |
A three-year-old baby -- born with Down syndrome and having subnormal motor skills -- has shown improvement after undergoing stem ...
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Can probiotics help those suffering with metabolic syndrome, obesity?

Elizabeth Jeffries |
In recent years, efforts to manage metabolic syndrome have fallen in with the lucrative, but untested weight loss market. Chief ...
pancreatic

Spread of pancreatic cancer fueled by epigenetic changes

Andrew Feinberg |
[Editor's note: Excerpts are from an interview with Andrew Feinberg of Johns Hopkins, whose research shows how epigenetics affects the spread of ...
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Birth language is retained, even if we never learned to speak it

Helen Briggs |
Babies build knowledge about the language they hear even in the first few months of life, research shows. If you ...
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Does Environmental Working Group’s “Dirty Dozen” list discourage Americans from eating fresh produce?

Cara Rosenbloom |
Editor's note: This article examines the potential influence of the Environmental Working Group's annual Dirty Dozen list of foods with the ...
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Lack of exercise, as much as genetic factors, may contribute to dementia

Honor Whiteman |
One of the biggest risk factors for Alzheimer's disease is the apolipoprotein E (APOE) e4 gene. According to the Alzheimer's ...