CIRBP Family, Tumors, Molecular Mechanisms, RNA-Binding Proteins, Cellular Stress Share and Cite: Cai, Y. , Wang, T. and Zhan ...
What makes the human brain unique? A Yale study unlocks new insights into genetic changes that shaped our evolution.
According to Dr. Kim, "It'll be the year of PDRN (polydeoxyribonucleotide) derived from salmon sperm. These DNA fragments have been shown to improve tissue elasticity, firmness, and have an ...
In human cells, only a small proportion of the information written in genes is used to produce proteins. How does the cell ...
In principle, mRNA vaccines are ideal for health emergencies as they can be quickly mass produced using a template. The problem is that current cell-based template production methods take too long, ...
They say that change takes time. Well, that's not the case for RNA. The small biological molecule acts like a switchboard ...
Human genes that encode proteins often contain non-coding segments known as introns. Removing introns is crucial for the proper expression of genetic information. Understanding how our cells ...
Is Earth really exceptional?  A new book seems to reaffirm that notion.  But given the right conditions, primitive life may be a mere byproduct of biophysics.
Researchers are unlocking secrets of our solar system by analyzing asteroid Bennu samples, some of the most pristine ever ...
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have demonstrated a new synthetic approach that turbocharges bacteria into producing more of a specific protein, even proteins that would normally destroy them, ...
This is an important and solid study that examines the role of TFAM, a protein that helps maintain mtDNA, in mtDNA mutator mice. The authors have demonstrated that TFAM's counteractive role in mtDNA ...
New gene therapy modalities, such as CRISPR guide RNA (single guide ribonucleic acid [sgRNA]) and messenger RNA (mRNA), ...