Manasee Wagh
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Articles by Manasee Wagh

Targeting with siRNAs
Manasee Wagh | | 4 min read
Researchers use nanoparticles and antibodies to take aim.

The art of alchemy
Manasee Wagh | | 1 min read
A new book explores the mystery and symbolism of the early days of chemistry

Chicken in the city
Manasee Wagh | | 4 min read
More urbanites are acquiring pet chickens, and filmmakers try to capture their experience

Gene therapy for Fido
Manasee Wagh | | 3 min read
Plasmid GHRH delivery in a dog. Credit: Courtesy of Patricia Brown" />Plasmid GHRH delivery in a dog. Credit: Courtesy of Patricia Brown A few months after arriving at Baylor College of Medicine in 1995, Ruxandra Draghia-Akli, an assistant professor, adopted an abandoned Jack Russell terrier she found at the cafeteria. Baylor, named for the school, is one of two dogs that Draghia-Akli has lost to cancer in the past six years, and watching his decline was taxing. ?He

Birth of an miRNA
Manasee Wagh | | 1 min read
The paper: X. Cai et al., ?Human microRNAs are processed from capped, polyadenylated transcripts that can also function as mRNAs.? RNA, 10:1957?66, 2004. (Cited in 99 papers) The finding: Bryan Cullen and colleagues at Duke University and the University of Kansas investigated the development of human micro-RNAs (miR

Life Science Industry Awards 2007
Life Science Industry Awards 2007 Saluting the winners: Customization, value, and customer service is the name of the game. By Andrea Gawrylewski, Bob Grant, and Manasee Wagh Although biomedical companies in search of new drugs often seem to grab all the headlines, anyone working in bioscience research and drug development knows that none of their advances would be possible without the life science industry that creates the rea

The 2007 Life Sciences Industry Awards
Saluting the winners: Customization, value, and customer service is the name of the game

Beatrix Potter, scientist
Manasee Wagh | | 4 min read
The acclaimed children's book author also was an ahead-of-her-time botanist

Metabolism gets clocked
Manasee Wagh | | 2 min read
The paper: F.W. Turek et al., "Obesity and metabolic syndrome in circadian Clock mutant mice." Science, 308:1043, 2005. (Cited in 90 papers) The finding: Joe Bass and others at Northwestern University found that mice with a mutated Clock gene showed both abnormal circadian rhythms and feeding behavior. Metabolic problems included obesity and abnormally high levels of blood cholesterol. The surprise: Circadian variatio
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