Interesting Engineering on MSN
AI uncovers 360,000 DNA knots that quietly shape how genes turn on and off
AI maps fleeting DNA quadruplexes, revealing paired structures that control genes in healthy cells and cancer.
One of the biggest quests in biology is understanding how every cell in an animal's body carries an identical genome yet ...
CI Jaekyung Kim of the IBS Center for Mathematical and Complex Systems, Professor Jinsu Kim of POSTECH, and Professor ...
A tiny percentage of our DNA—around 2%—contains 20,000-odd genes. The remaining 98%—long known as the non-coding genome, or ...
Scientists mapped hidden DNA switches in brain support cells to understand how gene control may influence Alzheimer’s disease ...
Researchers have revealed that so-called “junk DNA” contains powerful switches that help control brain cells linked to ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Junk' DNA may hold new clues to Alzheimer’s disease
When most of us think of DNA, we have a vague idea it's made up of genes that give us our physical features, our behavioral ...
A human ‘tubuloid’ model captures the slow progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD), addressing key limitations of animal ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
New study model shows Alzheimer’s disease can be reversed — not just prevented
For more than a century, Alzheimer’s disease has been framed as irreversible. Once memory and thinking decline, recovery has ...
High-resolution 3D womb model gives insights into embryo implantation, infertility, and signals between embryo and mother, ...
But only a tiny percentage of our DNA – around 2% – contains our 20,000-odd genes. The remaining 98% – long known as the non-coding genome, or so-called ‘junk’ DNA – includes many of the switches that ...
If stretched out, human DNA would be about 2 meters long. For this long strand to fit inside the cell nucleus, which is about ...
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