The first full computer model of a single-celled organism mimics the bacterium’s behaviors and paves the way to more complete disease models.
The first full computer model of a single-celled organism mimics the bacterium’s behaviors and paves the way to more complete disease models.
Rather than rely on plant-derived products, biotech companies are engineering bacteria and yeast to produce ingredients for fragrances.
Researchers engineer a member of the insect's intestinal flora to help thwart the malaria parasite before it can infect new hosts.
Peptides extracted from scorpion venom fights off drug-resistant bacterial infections in mice.
| July 1, 2012
In Chapter , "Genes, Freaks, DNA," author Sam Kean draws parallels between the lives of Gregor Mendel and Johannes Friedrich Miescher, who both made scientific discoveries that were truly ahead of their times.
Present in every tissue of the body, ubiquitin appears to be involved in a dizzying array of functions, from cell cycle and division to organelle and ribosome biogenesis, as well as the response to viral infection. The protein plays at least two role
Is printing out your own lab equipment, molecular models, and drug compounds the wave of the future?
Microscopic sponges made entirely of RNA enable efficient gene silencing.
Synthetic biologists harness software to design genes and networks.
Making macrophages in atherosclerotic plaques digest spent organelles instead of dying may help keep plaques stable.