New research suggests that the average person has about 20 genes with loss-of-function mutations—many more than previously suspected.
New research suggests that the average person has about 20 genes with loss-of-function mutations—many more than previously suspected.
Designing the simplest possible living organism artificially may lend clues as to what life is.
Researchers find a way to determine the sequence of a single species from metagenomics data of entire microbial communities.
Research in yeast shows that aneuploidy is both a consequence of and an adaptation to stress.
Researchers track a racehorse “speed gene” back to a single mare in the United Kingdom.
A reanalysis of the study reporting genes linked to extremely long life, which was retracted from Science last summer, is published in PLoS ONE.
An attempt to regrow the infamous GFAJ-1 bacteria, reported to incorporate arsenic into its DNA backbone, has failed.
Chromosomes accidentally stranded outside of the nucleus could contribute to cancer formation.
Genetic differences influence how well people perform on IQ tests as children and senior citizens.
Two new sequencing machines will read a human genome in 24 hours.