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tag new york city cell molecular biology evolution

Individual bacterial transcriptomes each plotted as a single point create a ring-shaped structure.
Rapidly Dividing Bacteria Coordinate Gene Expression and Replication
Kamal Nahas, PhD | Mar 15, 2024 | 4 min read
E. coli divides faster than it can replicate its genome, while simultaneously expressing its genes. Scientists recently revealed the intricate molecular coordination that makes this possible.
Genes and Cells In Today's Biology
Wh Massover | Oct 19, 1986 | 2 min read
MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY James DarneD, Harvey Lodish and David Baltimore. Freeman (Scientific American Books), New York, 1986. 1222 pp., illus. $42.95.   Molecular Cell Biology is a gigantic new textbook attempting to integrate molecular and cellular bioscience into a "new biology." The book's 25 chapters are divided into four groups. The first group discusses research history, chemical molecules, biochemical metabolism, cytology, subcellular organelles, research models and tools, and basic p
A bat flying in a dark cave
Turning on the Bat Signal
Hannah Thomasy, PhD | Mar 15, 2024 | 10+ min read
Scientists around the world investigate how bat immune systems cope with viral attacks and how this information could be used to keep humans safe.
Cell Biology
The Scientist Staff | Jun 27, 1993 | 2 min read
Q.-w. Xie, H.J. Cho, J. Calaycay, et al., "Cloning and characterization of inducible nitric oxide synthase from mouse macrophages," Science, 256:225-8, 1992. Carl Nathan (Division of Hematology-Oncology, Cornell University Medical College, New York): "In 1992, Science touted nitric oxide (NO) as `the molecule of the year.' Many articles contributed to this sobriquet. Among them, the most frequently cited has been this paper, produced in a collaboration with Merck Sharpe & Dohme Research Labor
NEW York-New Jersey Life Science Nirvana
Ted Agres | Apr 11, 2004 | 7 min read
Love it or hate it, if you want to play in the big leagues, the New York-New Jersey region is the place to be. From prestigous universities, medical centers, and research hospitals in Manhattan and Long Island, to major pharmaceutical research and manufacturing facilities in New Jersey, the region's life sciences can be characterized by such words as power-house and blockbuster.New York City alone (Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and the Bronx) boasts 25 academic research and medical
Scientists Meet at Rockefeller to Discuss Molecular Strategies in Biological Evolution
Ricki Lewis | Jul 19, 1998 | 6 min read
In science, things often aren't as simple as they seem. This is certainly the case for the genetic code. Even as elegant experiments in the 1960s assigned DNA and messenger RNA (mRNA) base triplets to specific amino acids, researchers were wondering if a protein's blueprints were the sole meaning imparted by those long strings of A, T, G and C. But back then, they could do little more than wonder. Today, with more than a dozen genomes sequenced, researchers can ask age-old questions as well as
Image of the Day: Cell Droplets
The Scientist and The Scientist Staff | Apr 4, 2018 | 1 min read
Proteins and RNA aggregate into “membraneless organelles” due to liquid-liquid phase separation.
Sponsor Profile: Biotech and the City
The Scientist Staff | Nov 21, 2004 | 4 min read
ImClone Systems began its history as a New York company in 1984 when its founders, an immunologist and a pathologist both living and working in the city, set out to meld the established and respected world of New York City academia with the dynamic and fledgling biotechnology industry.
dna microscopy visualization RNA cDNA mRNA transcripts cell biology
New Technique Maps RNAs in Cells Without a Microscope
Kerry Grens | Jun 20, 2019 | 1 min read
DNA microscopy pinpoints the locations of transcripts by laying a grid of tags over the molecules and labeling each connection.
The structure of a biological cell (macro)
The Long and Winding Road to Eukaryotic Cells
Amanda Heidt | Oct 17, 2022 | 10+ min read
Despite recent advances in the study of eukaryogenesis, much remains unresolved about the origin and evolution of the most complex domain of life.

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