Daily Human Digest
Sequencing the Golden Eagle genome to help the birds avoid wind turbines
[A]n estimated 70 golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) are killed annually at even a single large wind farm - the Altamont Pass ...
Analyzing genes of mouth bacteria can detect pancreatic cancer
Patients with pancreatic cancer have a different and distinct profile of specific bacteria in their saliva compared to healthy controls ...
Bacteria in isolation mutate more
Bacteria that have no friends don’t get sad; they get weird. When E. coli cells sense fewer other bacteria around ...
“Foreign” genes naturally jump between species, clouding anti-GMO criticism
In the paste of Roquefort and on the surface of Camembert, the microscopic filamentous fungi Penicillium roqueforti and Penicillium camembertii ...
Was Nicholas Wade too speculative on race in “A Troublesome Inheritance”?
New York Times science writer Nicholas Wade’s main claim in his new book "A Troublesome Inheritance" is that human races ...
Japan’s STAP stem cell controversy deepens as accusations of misconduct focus on investigating panel
Members of the RIKEN institute committee that found Haruko Obokata -- of STAP stem cell infamy -- guilty of misconduct ...
Mutations in gene causes metabolic syndrome in Iranian families
Genetic mutations causing an inherited form of the metabolic syndrome have been found, with implications for drug development across diabetes, ...
Ultra strong measles vaccine cures woman of cancer
In a breakthrough that could offer new hope to people with some kinds of cancer, Mayo Clinic researchers say they ...
De-masculizing RNA determines sex in silkworms, a new pathway for sex determination in animals
In the silk business, sex is money. Male silkworms weave cocoons with more silk of a higher quality than females ...
Gene test can predict when women will deliver prematurely
A blood-based diagnostic test accurately predicted whether 70% of female study participants with threatened preterm labor (TPTL) would or would ...
On earwax, body odor and culture: A genetic explanation
When I was in college a Korean American friend confided to me that his roommate had an issue. He had ...
Orchard of knowledge: Artist will insert Wikipedia’s catalog into DNA of apple trees
Last year, Joe Davis, the artist in residence at George Church’s genetics lab, at Harvard Medical School, received an unmarked ...
Species decline? Long term biodiversity study documents new species on rise
The diversity of the world's life forms -- from corals to carnivores -- is under assault. Decades of scientific studies ...
Poop therapy: Big pharma moving towards microbiome threapies
The human body teems with trillions of microorganisms — a microbial landscape that has attracted roughly US$500 million in research ...
NIH to researchers: study males and females equally from cellular studies on up
Amid growing evidence that many drugs are not as effective in women as in men, the National Institutes of Health ...
Chemicals affect sperm health, now we know how
Additives known as endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) compromise male fertility by interfering with a membrane-bound calcium channel that normally controls ...
Bacteria in lungs may protect humans from developing asthma
Human cells are outnumbered ten-to-one by the microbes that thrive in and on us. Now a study finds that the ...
Humans’ love of watching animals is hardwired
Humans derive pleasure watching animals in zoos, nature and in popular culture. Beyond their uses as food sources and domestic ...
Oldest fossil sperm is huge, poses evolutionary conundrum
Scientists find sperm inside 17-million-year-old shrimp -- but it's not just any sperm. It's longer than the animals that made ...
Gene changes, diabetes continuing legacy of Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge
Cambodia’s diabetes clinics are overflowing. On its surface, it looks like little more than another country’s growing pains as it ...
Some experts find ethical uncertainty in artificial DNA
Artificial DNA, recently successfully implemented in a living cell by California scientists, presents more ethical concerns than opportunities for medicine, ...
Skin microbiomes differ largely between cultures, more diverse sampling is needed
Microbial samples taken from populations living in the U.S. and Tanzania reveal that the microbiome of the human hand is ...
Will FDA regulations force US direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies overseas?
23andMe is reportedly looking to enter international markets. Will they find their international hosts' regulatory structure as unfriendly as the ...
Rumors of junk DNA’s death greatly exaggerated
A new paper in PLOS Genetics presents a compelling case for why "junk DNA" is still a useful concept, despite ...
Do we need regulation for coming brain augmentation technologies?
If you could permanently change your brain to work better, would you? Or, maybe more importantly, would you have the ...
Short men live longer thanks to FOXO3 gene
It's nice to be tall, right? Sure, it's great... unless you want to become an astronaut, or a horse jockey, ...
Stem cell generated neurons from schizophrenics develop abnormally
Using new stem cell technology, scientists at the Salk Institute have shown that neurons generated from the skin cells of ...