Opinion
A precise tool to edit life: How CRISPR genome editing is changing agriculture and healthcare
Imagine if you could fix a spelling mistake in a long document with just one click. Now, imagine doing the same with the genetic code of a plant or even a human cell. That’s ...
Marine bacteria are key to determining whether carbon is recycled near the ocean surface or transported to deeper waters, but ...
Morning Overview on MSN
CRISPR researchers revived an ancient gene that could block disease
Researchers have used CRISPR to switch back on a gene that vanished from the human lineage roughly 20 million years ago, ...
Biotech today is moving at lightning speed, seriously. It feels like every week there’s something new that changes how we ...
The world of medical testing is always changing, and point-of-care molecular diagnostics are a big part of that. These tests let us find out what’s going on with a patient’s health right there, ...
Scientists are using CRISPR to fast-track the domestication of a wild fruit. For roughly 10,000 years, farming communities ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Invisible bacterial patterns hide messages until triggered with correct biochemical
Scientists have developed messages that only appear under specific biochemical triggers, using living bacteria.
A study led by researchers at the Department of Civil Engineering at The University of Hong Kong (HKU) has uncovered alarming ...
Now, Musunuru and colleagues are preparing a master clinical protocol to study a CRISPR therapy that's mostly the same as the one they used to treat baby KJ, except they plan to swap out the gene ...
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