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Muddled studies? Blame the chow
The Scientist 2005, 19(15):12
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Soon after reproductive and developmental biologist Sudhansu Dey's group at the University of Kansas moved to new quarters at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., they began noticing that once well-established results on uterine gene expression and reproductive function in female mice procured from the same supplier, and of the same genetic strain, had become a lot less predictable. Three years later, they seem to have discovered the ghost in the cage: rodent chow.
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