Privacy advocates are arguing that collecting genetic data upon arrest is an invasion of privacy, given recent evidence that 80 percent of the human genome is functional.
Privacy advocates are arguing that collecting genetic data upon arrest is an invasion of privacy, given recent evidence that 80 percent of the human genome is functional.
The journal PLOS Pathogens abruptly retracts the seminal paper linking XMRV to disease.
A seventh patient succumbs to a deadly, drug-resistant superbug terrorizing the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center.
Reinvestigating a natural antibiotic compound reveals its potential as a tuberculosis drug.
Many vaccines are on the market for various serogroups of meningococcal disease, but a solution to provide broad protection against MenB remains elusive.
Researchers identified the 3-step process leaf-cutter ants use to grow helpful bacteria on their bodies.
Friendly sinus bacteria may keep sinusitis-causing strains in check.
A cheap pain reliever that can kill drug-resistant, tuberculosis-causing bacteria may never be tested.
With a cardboard box, a light source, and some filters, roadside clinics can accurately test for tuberculosis.
Mimicking a host-cell histone protein offers flu a sneaky tactic to suppress immune response.