Researchers can identify individuals by the unique chemical signatures in their breath, suggesting that exhalations could be used for metabolomic tests.
Daily News Roundup
Researchers can identify individuals by the unique chemical signatures in their breath, suggesting that exhalations could be used for metabolomic tests.
Living fossils not so fossilized; Canadian gov’t threatens scientists’ freedom to speak and publish; gene therapy for sensory disorders; an unusual theory of cancer; clues for an HIV vaccine
Microbes affect weight loss; dozens of cancer-linked genes identified; a climate change scientists speaks out about personal attacks; isolation among elderly linked to death
Researchers identify a protein involved in the chromosomal disorder that could explain its characteristic learning deficits.
European scientists have taken down the HeLa genome after publishing it without the consent of Henrietta Lacks’s family.
The country’s fertility regulator reported that the technique has “broad support.”
A presidential bioethics commission lays out the framework for testing the anthrax vaccine in children.
Disgruntled Nobel loser sues; brain trauma researchers search for biomarker of a chronic condition; receptor for novel coronavirus found; the rise of transcriptomics; and ethical oversight of participant-led research
The US government has come out with new rules for life science research deemed risky.
The first human trial of a treatment using induced pluripotent stem cells has received conditional approval from an institutional review board in Japan.