Personalized precision cancer treatments tailored to your genes improving but hurdles high

Lauren Gravitz | 
Elaine Mardis and her colleagues first encountered 39-year-old Lucy in 2010 at the Genome Institute at Washington University in St ...

Gene therapy hot again as success stories roll in

Laura Cassiday | 
In the early 2000s, gene therapy seemed to be on life support. The once-promising technique, which uses engineered viruses and ...

Gene variations cause spiny sea bass to look dramatically different as babies and adults

Jennifer Frazer | 
Among divers and marine biologists, it’s common knowledge that ocean fish lead double lives. Like birds and butterflies, their young ...

Circadian rhythm of water transport protein affects skin cycles throughout the day

Ann Lukits | 
Researchers have discovered a protein that regulates the circadian ebb and flow of water in and out of the skin's ...

Old immunotherapy drug revived with some treatment tweeks

Heidi Ledford | 
When Dave deBronkart was diagnosed with advanced kidney cancer in 2007, he learned about a treatment called high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) ...

Genetic susceptibility and well-timed exposures responsible for adult allergies

Heidi Mitchell | 
Allergies are largely genetic. If a parent has allergies, chances are good the children will too. But that doesn't necessarily ...
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Antibiotics can harm even when they work, contributing to allergies, diabetes, maybe autism

Debora MacKenzie | 
Antibiotics have ended untold human misery by curing bacterial infections, yet we are losing these wonder drugs. New Scientist has ...
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Chicken Coop project traces genetics, history of multi-talented domestic chicken

Kenrick Vezina | 
Who cares how the chicken crossed the road; the intriguing question is now did it become such a multi-tasker. Nature's ...
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Cold case: Cryogenics may enter modern emergency care

Helen Thomson | 
Cryogenic preservation has long been fodder for science fiction films. But, emergency room doctors in Pittsburgh hope to save severely ...

23andMe CEO discusses future of direct-to-consumer genetic testing company

Stephanie Lee | 
Six months ago, the Food and Drug Administration ordered 23andMe, the Google-backed genetic-testing startup, to stop selling saliva kits designed ...

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 ...

Meet the coolest new species discovered in 2014

A top 10 list of species discovered in the last 12 months is topped by the olinguito (Bassaricyon neblina), a ...

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 ...

Geneticist’s take on cystic fibrosis gene therapy

Ricki Lewis | 
I’m at the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy annual meeting, one of my favorite conferences. The very first ...

Connection between pain and aging may lead through matabolic genes

Virgina Hughes | 
Age brings pain: back pain, eye strain, sore joints, and the like. And pain, too, seems to accelerate aging. Several ...
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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 ...
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As reproductive technology charges ahead, legislative and ethical oversight flounders

Meredith Knight | 
Technology to assist human reproduction is growing quickly and without much government oversight. As these options expand past creating unorthodox ...
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Genetics of ‘race’ unequivocal, only seems controversial because post-modernists, PC media dissimulate

Ron Unz | 
Nicholas Wade’s "A Troublesome Inheritance" has come under attack in some circles because it acknowledges what is an unarguable fact ...

Where DNA says ‘stop,’ some microbes go

Erika Check Hayen | 
The instructions encoded into DNA are thought to follow a universal set of rules across all domains of life. But ...

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 ...

Gene determines size of fat cells, might help treatments for insulin resistance

Researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have for the first time identified a gene driving the development of pernicious adipose ...
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Scientific American blogger invokes KKK to try to discredit Wade’s “race” book

Eric Michael Johnson | 
Old middle school trick: Instead of calling someone a name, ‘stupid’ for example, just say his ideas are stupid and ...

Lab grown burgers may be too pricey (and weird?) for mainstream market

Francie Diep | 
Made with some breadcrumbs, egg, and 20,000 lab-grown cow muscle cells, the world's first lab-grown burger made its debut last ...

Animals who are both male and female offer insight into evolutionary development

Ferris Jabr | 
A very odd creature flitted past friends James Adams and Irving Finkelstein—a swallowtail unlike any they had ever seen. Its ...

Females can change their reproductive tracts depending on the sperms X or Y chromosome

Anna Azvolinsky | 
Old wives’ tales abound about how to tip the odds of conceiving a boy or a girl. Some say that ...

New job for RNA: Hold tight to proteins to turn genes on and off

Kerry Grens | 
The small RNA RsmZ is known to sequester proteins that repress translation in bacteria. A study published in Nature this ...
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