Sciencephile the AI on MSN
How genetic engineering is about to change life itself
Genetic engineering is moving faster than almost any other scientific field. New tools now allow researchers to edit DNA with ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Genetic hacking could turbocharge comeback of the iconic American chestnut
Once a defining tree of eastern forests, the American chestnut was nearly erased by a foreign fungus within a few human generations. A genetically engineered line known as Darling 54 has now pushed ...
Adding too much water to your plants can damage them as much as not having enough water. In the environment, plants submerged under excessive rain have limited access to light and oxygen, which ...
A research team has developed the "SUPER (Synthetic Upcycling Platform for Engineering Regulators)" platform, which dramatically enhances the performance and stability of gene regulatory devices. This ...
As the human population continues to explode, the need for efficient crop growth also expands. While there have been great strides in plant genetics and modification, there is still much to be learned ...
GenScript is delighted to announce its 4th Annual Virtual Summit on Gene and Cell Engineering. This event will feature leading experts from academia, pharma, and biotech, showcasing the transformative ...
Bigger, tastier tomatoes and eggplants could soon grace our dinner plates thanks to Johns Hopkins scientists who have discovered genes that control how large the fruits will grow. The research—led by ...
The group that advocated for the GloFish carve-out is asking for more aquatic species to be exempt from the ban.
Life runs on instructions you never see. Every cell reads DNA, turns that message into RNA, and then builds proteins that ...
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