ZME Science on MSN
Researchers created a genetically modified transparent squid — and this could be huge for brain research
Historically, turning invisible was considered the stuff of wizardry and spells. More recently, physicists have also looked ...
Hosted on MSN
Genetic Engineering: Navigating the Promises and Ethical Challenges of a Revolutionary Science
Genetic engineering is considered one of the most sophisticated scientific tools for changing the genetic blueprint of a living organism according to our suitable design. This attention-seeking branch ...
AZ Animals on MSN
Synthetic Biology May Be the Future of Wildlife Conservation
From CRISPR to gene banking, synthetic biology has big implications for wildlife evolution and conservation, but ethical ...
Some conservation groups are calling for an effective ban on genetic modification, but others say these technologies are ...
Advances in cancer immunotherapy from immune checkpoint modulation to adoptive cell transfer of tumour-infiltrating ...
Seven years after the first gene-edited babies were revealed, biotech startup Manhattan Genomics is reviving the idea of ...
Scientists are hoping to use genetic engineering to reduce the transmission of Lyme disease. The scientists' target is not ...
We are now in the second great wave of the genetic revolution, not defined by reading the human code of life, but by rewriting it.
The return of the long-extinct wooly mammoth or dodo bird may sound like a storyline straight out of science fiction. It’s not. Several de-extinction projects all share an ambitious aim to resurrect ...
2hon MSN
Meet Ben Lamm, the Billionaire Working to Bring Extinct Animals Back to Life With Hollywood’s Help
After his company, Colossal Biosciences, successfully revived the dire wolf from extinction, he's ready to continue to change ...
A team of scientists created a new gene-editing tool that they claim is more accurate than the industry standard, CRISPR. Researchers from the University of Sydney, Australia, developed what is called ...
Funded by the UB Provost, the new Center for Cell, Gene and Tissue Engineering (CGTE) will be led by SUNY Distinguished Professor Stelios Andreadis. “I am very happy to announce the launch of the Cell ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results