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Preparing for the inevitable: DNA tests for newborns

Anne Eisenberg | 
Today, parents don't need to deal with the knowledge of genetic pitfalls that might lie ahead for their offspring. But ...
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Emerging tools for synthetic biology in plants

Holger Puchta, Ian Small | 
Despite the serious complexity of multicelluar organisms, synthetic biology in plants has been progressing rapidly. This editorial examines the way ...

Uzbekistan’s plan to genetically groom Olympic athletes won’t work

Jason Koebler | 
In a few years, we'll look back at the Sochi Olympics as the last one where being chosen as an ...

Why genetically engineering microbes to make biofuel failed

Martin LaMonica | 
Biotech company LS9 launched in 2005 with great ambitions: founded by premier scientists and top-flight venture capitalists, it planned to ...

DNA evidence frees men from prison, decades later

Ben Brumfield | 
Two men behind bars for more than half their lives over a triple murder walked free this week after DNA ...

Gene-by-Gene settles lawsuit with Myriad Genetics

Kevin Noonan | 
Gene-by-Gene, Inc. was one of the first direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic diagnostics companies to announce that it would offer BRCA1/BRCA2 testing ...

X-chromosome variants help explain height difference by gender

Researchers from the University of Helsinki, Finland, have now identified novel X-chromosomal genetic variants that influence human height. The researchers ...

How far do you go to weed out lesser genetic defects

William Saletan | 
Two days ago in the New York Times, Gina Kolata told the story of Amanda Kalinsky, a 30-year-old woman who ...

Ant caste is determined by DNA

Lara Stielow | 
The rank of an ant in its colony’s caste is now understood to be determined by genetics. Evolutionary biologists at ...

Learning to fix a body’s broken genes

It sounds like science fiction, and for years it seemed as though it was just that: fiction. But the idea ...

Many stem cell lines aren’t good enough for commercial use

Kerry Grens | 
Many of the stem cell lines used by academics and registered with the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) would ...

Uzbekistan testing children for athletic potential

Ron Synovitz, Zamira Eshanova | 
The idea of using genetic testing to spot future world-class athletes has been bandied about for years. Now, Uzbekistan hopes ...

Family thwarts genetic disease by narrowing the bloodline

Tony Dokoupil | 
Days before she ended her pregnancy, Joselin Linder was thrilled to imagine herself as a parent. Linder is not a ...
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Acid bath stem cell method may work for human cells

Helen Thomson | 
Scientists may have used the newly-discovered environmental stress method for inducing pluripotency in human cells. This could change everything ...
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The cross-species merger that made life as we know it possible

Ed Yong | 
The transition from the classic prokaryotic, nucleus-free model to the deluxe eukaryotic one is arguably the most important event in ...

International Cancer Genome Consortium releases data on 10k cancer genomes

The International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) today announced that it has made available to the scientific community data from more ...
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What’s it really like to work in biotech?

Lisa Belmont | 
The life of a scientist in biotechnology is demanding, but there's a good chance that you could positively impact human ...
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Brain science pioneer shifts focus of NIMH to basic neuroscience and genetics

Benedict Carey | 
Drain science pioneer Dr. Thomas R. Insel, now director of the National Institute of Mental Health, has sharply shifted the ...

Searching for invulnerability to cancer

Cath Ennis | 
In June 2013, I described how sequencing the highly abnormal genomes of cancer cells can identify some of the mutations ...

Humans shaped the horse’s gait, through genetics

A genetic mutation in horses that causes them to move with a gait that humans find desirable was spread to ...

Genome sequencing: bringing people and their disease risks together

Erinn Hutkin | 
Last year, actress and activist Angelina Jolie made headlines when she wrote an op-ed piece for the New York Times ...

General exonerations in the US increasing, DNA-based exonerations dropping

Scott Shackford | 
Eighty-seven — It seems like such a small number compared to the more than two million adults currently incarcerated in ...

About 1/3 of Americans don’t want genetic testing for cancer

Kirsten Stewart | 
Most Americans would consider undergoing genetic testing to predict their risk for certain cancers, but confusion persists over the benefits ...

Black Death altered European genes

Stephanie Pappas | 
The Black Death of the 14th century may be written into the DNA of survivors' descendants, new research finds. The ...

New York City student ancestry project to analyze DNA

Susan Scutti | 
“I’m part Neanderthal,” Rachel Bruton, a member of National Geographic’s Explorer Programs team, told Medical Daily. “I consider it bragging ...

Who should be able to access your genetic data?

Kate Rogers | 
Imagine having a child and knowing at birth what diseases he or she will face in life. Today, parents can ...

Genes predispose some toward violence

Erik Voeten | 
Brown university professor of political science Rose McDermott has a fascinating guest post over at Political Violence @ a Glance: ...
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