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Denisovan DNA influences the immune systems of modern Oceanians — but researchers aren't sure why
Genes inherited from the now-extinct Denisovans are actively playing a role in the immune system of some people from Oceania.
The breakthrough could one day allow doctors to repair disease-causing mutations in embryos.
The alternative text for this image may have been generated using AI. Here, we generated human cell models that allow direct control of origin licensing and applied selective CDK4/6 inhibitors, ...
Scientists Unethically Experiment On the Unborn to Improve Gene Editing Techniques, Bioethicist Says
Genetic researchers are experimenting on unborn children in trials that could have been done on animal embryos, according to ...
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Current approaches to mapping fork progression in the human genome suffer from drastically low throughput. Here, we introduce ForkML, a nanopore sequencing-based method automatically positioning ...
He and a colleague proved a theory advanced by the Nobel Prize winners James Watson and Francis Crick, who discovered DNA’s helical structure. By Delthia Ricks Franklin W. Stahl, a molecular biologist ...
Most people today have a little Neanderthal DNA sprinkled through their genome. These genomic signals are the telltale signs that overlapping populations of ancient anatomically modern humans and ...
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