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19h
Techno-Science.net on MSN🧬 Repairing broken DNA and saving our cellsThe DNA in our cells is constantly damaged, with the most severe being the simultaneous breakage of both strands that compose ...
Every living cell must interpret its genetic code—a sequence of chemical letters that governs countless cellular functions. A new study by researchers from the Center for Theoretical Biological ...
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News-Medical.Net on MSNNew discovery uncovers hidden drivers of DNA transcription errorsEvery living cell must interpret its genetic code - a sequence of chemical letters that governs countless cellular functions.
To print microscopic structures, scientists need to inject a liquid material called a photoresist into the cell. This special ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNMIT student builds pocket-sized 3D printer that uses light to create objects in secsResearchers have developed photonic devices that manipulate light to enable innovative applications, like pocket-sized ...
In their important manuscript, Gangadharan, Kober and Rice focus on how Stu2/XMAP215-family microtubule polymerases use their TOG domains to catalytically promote microtubule growth, testing whether ...
For nearly 15 years, a man on death row in Texas has sought DNA testing to try and prove he did not kill an 85-year-old woman.
The Supreme Court granted Texas death row inmate Ruben Gutierrez the right to sue over DNA testing laws as he argues he shouldn't be given the death penalty for the 1998 murder he was convicted of.
Air Force veteran Shirlee Lewis Henkel was identified via DNA 37 years after his death in Tarrant County, solving a decades-old unidentified human remains case.
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