New collaboration empowers customers with sequence-perfect constructs as long as 50 kb Integrated DNA Technologies (IDT), a Danaher company and a global leader in genomics, and Ansa Biotechnologies, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
AI meets DNA: US scientists design massive genetic circuit libraries faster than ever
The new technique is called CLASSIC, an acronym for “combining long and short range sequencing to investigate genetic ...
Rice University researchers created CLASSIC, a platform that builds vast libraries of genetic circuits and links each full ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
New study provides a key breakthrough in cancer therapy and synthetic biology
Randomness inside cells can decide whether a cancer returns after chemotherapy or whether an infection survives antibiotics.
While the central dogma of molecular biology outlines the linear flow of genetic information from DNA to RNA to proteins (black lines), glycomics introduces a “3rd code of life”—glycans—that operates ...
Researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research, London identified the CIP2A–TOPBP1 complex as a master regulator of DNA repair during mitosis, coordinating backup pathways that protect chromosomes ...
Live Science on MSN
DNA from ancient viral infections helps embryos develop, mouse study reveals
A stretch of viral DNA in the mouse genome gives cells in early-stage embryos the potential to become almost any cell type in ...
ZME Science on MSN
Meet Stephen Quake: The Scientist Who Treats Biology like Physics and Turned Life Into Data
Biology has always been an unruly science. Cells divide when they want to. Genes switch on and off like temperamental lights.
Sequencing mammoth DNA has already helped scientists map out how these Ice Age giants evolved, migrated, and survived. But there's a hidden layer of history still waiting to be decoded – the microbes ...
Pipettes? Check. Centrifuges? Check. Microplates? Check. Gloves? Check. Salmon sperm DNA? Check. Wait what? There are a variety of machines, consumables, and safety equipment needed to operate a ...
What if a single Renaissance drawing could reveal not just who made it, but the biological traces of Leonardo da Vinci ...
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