ZME Science on MSN
How Life Solved Its “Impossible” Problem: Leading Chemist Explains Life Doesn’t Need a Miracle to Appear
Life may have emerged from a surprisingly simple network of chemical reactions long before cells or genes existed.
This study offers important insight into the pathogenic basis of intragenic frameshift deletions in the carboxy-terminal domain of MECP2, which account for some Rett syndrome cases, yet similar ...
Morning Overview on MSN
AI finds 360,000 DNA knots that quietly control gene switches
Artificial intelligence has just redrawn the map of our genome’s control room, revealing hundreds of thousands of tiny DNA ...
Thymagen (also called thymogen; dipeptide Glu-Trp, EW) is a synthetic peptide analog derived from thymic extracts and regarded in peptide bioregulator research for its putative immunoregulatory and ...
Scientists successfully extract RNA from a 130-year-old Tasmanian tiger, thylacine, revealing how its genes functioned before its extinction.
We have to wait too long for answers! As we embark on the agonizing wait for Pluribus Season 2, I’ve compiled a list of burning questions that will live rent free in my brain like Manousos squatting ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists discover new forms of life inside human bodies that don’t match anything biology has classified
A newly identified class of RNA molecules has been discovered in bacteria living inside the human body. These circular ...
This study presents SynaptoGen, a differentiable extension of connectome models that links gene expression, protein-protein interaction probabilities, synaptic multiplicity, and synaptic weights, and ...
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