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Genetics News And Research Archives Page 7

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New technique puts DNA profiling of E. coli on fast track (3/18/2008)

Using new genetic techniques, scientists are unlocking the secrets of how E coli bacteria contaminate food and make people sick. ...> Full Article


Genetic Counselors Turn to Unconventional Counseling To Meet Explosive Demand for Genetic Testing (3/18/2008)

Imagine receiving genetic test results for a disease you could develop later in life without having anyone with whom to discuss your options for managing the risk. That's becoming a common occurrence as people turn to the Internet and other outlets for genetic testing without genetic counseling. In an effort to broaden accessibility to genetic counseling, researchers are exploring non-conventional counseling methods that challenge traditional approaches. ...> Full Article


Genes that protect against atherosclerosis identified (3/17/2008)

One way of combating atherosclerosis is to reduce levels of "bad cholesterol" in the blood. Scientists at the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet have now identified the genes that bring about this beneficial effect. ...> Full Article


Royal jelly makes bee queens, boosts nurture case (3/16/2008)

New research may explain why eating royal jelly destines honeybee larvae to become queens instead of workers - and in the process adds new weight to the role of environmental factors in the nature/nurture divide. ...> Full Article


Systems biology approach identifies nutrient regulation of biological clock in plants (3/16/2008)

Using a systems biological analysis of genome-scale data from the model plant Arabidopsis, an international team of researchers identified that the master gene controlling the biological clock is sensitive to nutrient status. The study will appear in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. This hypothesis derived from multi-network analysis of Arabidopsis genomic data, and validated experimentally, has shed light on how nutrients affect the molecular networks controlling plant growth and development in response to nutrient sensing. ...> Full Article


Bioinformatics technology provides new insight into microbial activities (3/15/2008)

Scientists may gain a new insight into the relationship between viruses and their environments thanks to a new computational technology developed by researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory. This technology has already been used to identify subtle differences in the metabolic processes of microbial communities. ...> Full Article


Some cheaters can keep it in their genes (3/15/2008)

A new study examining social behaviour suggests certain individuals are genetically programmed to cheat and often will do… providing they can get away with it. ...> Full Article


High-School Scientists Decode DNA Sequence, Present Findings (3/14/2008)

High-School Scientists Decode DNA Sequence, Present FindingsNew Jersey students publish their findings, present their work at the National Science Foundation ...> Full Article


Crop scientists discover gene that controls fruit shape (3/14/2008)

Crop scientists have cloned a gene that controls the shape of tomatoes, a discovery that could help unravel the mystery behind the huge morphological differences among edible fruits and vegetables, as well as provide new insight into mechanisms of plant development. ...> Full Article


Genetic analysis reveals range of Rett syndrome (3/13/2008)

The first comprehensive analysis of the clinical effects of genetic mutations involved in Rett syndrome will enable affected families to receive a more accurate indication of their child's prognosis. ...> Full Article


Epigenetic changes discovered in major psychosis (3/12/2008)

New clues for uncovering the mysteries of mental illness ...> Full Article


Lab characterizes novel regulator of chromosome function (3/12/2008)

Lab has shed new light on a novel histone acetyltransferase protein complex called ATAC ...> Full Article


Handheld DNA detector (3/11/2008)

Researcher describes a mathematical simulation to show how a new type of nanoscale transistor might be coupled to a DNA sensor system to produce a characteristic signal for specific DNA fragments in a sample ...> Full Article


New revelations in epigenetic control shed light on breast cancer (3/11/2008)

Scientists discover that long-term regulation of the human genome is much more dynamic than assumed ...> Full Article


Researchers discover the structural alphabet of RNA (3/9/2008)

A team of bioinformaticians at the Université de Montréal (UdeM) report in the March 6th edition of Nature the discovery of a structural alphabet that can be used to infer the 3D structure of ribonucleic acid (RNA) from sequence data, providing new tools to understand the role of this important class of cellular regulators. ...> Full Article


Protocols features high-throughput methods for analyzing gene activity (3/9/2008)

New high-throughput methods are revolutionizing our understanding of transcriptional regulation ...> Full Article


Brown-led study rearranges some branches on animal tree of life (3/8/2008)

A study led by Brown University biologist Casey Dunn uses new genomics tools to answer old questions about animal evolution. The study is the most comprehensive animal phylogenomic research project to date, involving 40 million base pairs of new DNA data taken from 29 animal species. ...> Full Article


Zebrafish provide useful screening tool for genes, compounds that protect against hearing loss (3/8/2008)

In a study published in the Feb. 29 issue of the journal PLoS Genetics, researchers at the University of Washington have developed a research method that relies on a zebrafish's lateral line--the faint line running down each side of a fish that enables it to sense its surroundings--to quickly screen for genes and chemical compounds that protect against hearing loss from some medications. ...> Full Article


Giant panda genome to be sequenced (3/7/2008)

Giant panda genome to be sequencedResearchers announce the launch of the International Giant Panda Genome Project ...> Full Article


How worms protect their chromosomes: Thereby hangs a surprising tail (3/7/2008)

How worms protect their chromosomes: Thereby hangs a surprising tailA team of scientists has discovered that the roundworm C. elegans constructs the protective tips of its chromosomes - known as telomeres - with a little more panache than do mammals, a finding that could deepen our understanding of the interrelationship of aging and cancer. ...> Full Article


Gene variants may increase risk of anxiety disorder (3/6/2008)

Strongest genetic evidence to date could help identify new drug targets ...> Full Article


Genes hold the key to how happy we are, scientists say (3/6/2008)

Happiness in life is as much down to having the right genetic mix as it is to personal circumstances according to a recent study. ...> Full Article


Researchers Help Unlock the Genetic Secrets of Corn (3/5/2008)

Researchers Help Unlock the Genetic Secrets of CornRelying on a genetic "physical map" developed by University of Arizona plant scientists, researchers from Washington University, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Iowa State University and the UA have completed a working draft of the corn genome. By unlocking the genetic secrets of this crop vital to U.S. agriculture, the researchers have gained information that could ultimately help society deal with drought, global warming, population pressures and increasing energy needs. ...> Full Article


Mice with gene deletion provide clues to Prader-Willi syndrome in study (3/5/2008)

A new mouse model for a genetic cause of obesity has been developed by scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. The researchers hope that learning more about the mice, which overeat but do not gain weight, will help them develop new therapies for people with Prader-Willi syndrome, a rare genetic condition that triggers uncontrollable eating. ...> Full Article


Device allows scientists to control gene activity across generations of cells (3/4/2008)

Just as cells inherit genes, they also inherit a set of instructions that tell genes when to become active, in which tissues and to what extent. Now, Rockefeller University researchers have built a device that, by allowing scientists to turn genes on and off in actively multiplying budding yeast cells, will help them figure out more precisely than before how genes and proteins interact with one another and how these interactions drive cellular functions. ...> Full Article


Short RNA strand helps exposed skin cells protect body from bacteria, dehydration and even cancer (3/4/2008)

Short RNA strand helps exposed skin cells protect body from bacteria, dehydration and even cancerEvery minute, 30,000 of our outermost skin cells die so that we can live. When they do, new cells migrate from the inner layer of the skin to the surface of it, where they form a tough protective barrier. In a series of elegant experiments in mice, researchers at Rockefeller University have now discovered a tiny RNA molecule that helps create this barrier. The results not only yield new insight into how skin first evolved, but also suggest how healthy cells can turn cancerous. ...> Full Article


Zebrafish provide useful screening tool for genes, drugs that protect against hearing loss (3/3/2008)

A small striped fish is helping scientists understand what makes people susceptible to a common form of hearing loss, although, in this case, it's not the fish's ears that are of interest. In a study published on February 29 in the open-access journal PLoS Genetics, researchers at the University of Washington have developed a research method that relies on a zebrafish's lateral line-the faint line running down each side of a fish that enables it to sense its surroundings-to quickly screen for genes and chemical compounds that protect against hearing loss from some medications. The study was funded in part by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), one of the National Institutes of Health. ...> Full Article


Understanding primate evolution could aid HIV research (3/3/2008)

Evolution moves in fits and starts, shaping species through random genetic mutations that can help them survive or even hasten their death. But although the mutations occur by chance, the process can create surprisingly similar results. Now, in a startling twist, new research has provided an example in which evolution didn't just result in similar outcomes - it actually repeated itself, occurring the same way twice. Scientists at Rockefeller University and the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center have shown that nearly the exact same mutation occurred twice, in two monkey species that live on opposite sides of the world from each other. And while the change evolved independently in each case, in both species it plays a distinct role in how the animals fend off disease. ...> Full Article


All Eyes and Ears on the Corn Genome (3/3/2008)

Researchers complete draft sequence in less than three years ...> Full Article


Genetic Coding Of The Pea Unraveled (3/2/2008)

The pea is one of many important crop species that is unsuited to the Agrobacterium-based genetic modification techniques that are commonly used to work with crops. Researchers have now discovered the first high-throughput forward and reverse genetics tool for the pea (Pisum sativum), could have major benefits for crop breeders around the world. ...> Full Article


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