By making the world's microbial DNA easier to explore, a new sequence alignment tool, LexicMap, lets scientists search for a ...
The Age of AI will rely on massive volumes of data that can be easily stored and retrieved—and bioscience may have an ingenious solution.
Advances in machine learning, automation, and predictive analytics promise to enhance the accuracy, speed, and scalability of ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
DNA sequence once overlooked as ‘junk’ found to drive human chromosome fusions
Leonardo Gomes de Lima, Ph.D., a postdoctoral associate in the Gerton Lab, led the research. The findings show how these chromosome fusions form, why they remain stable, and how repetitive DNA, once ...
Live Science on MSN
How long does DNA last?
The world's oldest DNA comes from a 2.4 million-year-old ecosystem in Greenland. Will scientists eventually sequence even older DNA?
Morning Overview on MSN
Baltic amber holds 7,000-year-old insect DNA
Often referred to as the ‘gold of the North’, Baltic amber serves as an exceptional natural time capsule, preserving a ...
In 2015, a paleoanthropology team discovered jaw remains of a roughly 42,000-year-old Neanderthal in France. Over the next several years, the team, lead by Ludovic Slimak, found more of the ...
5don MSN
Bridge recombinases, optimized for human cells, enable massive programmable DNA rearrangements
For decades, gene-editing science has been limited to making small, precise edits to human DNA, akin to correcting typos in ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Tagomics publishes a new approach to genome-wide epigenomic profiling
Tagomics Ltd., a pioneering biomarker discovery and diagnostics company, today announced the publication of a peer-reviewed study in Cell Reports Methods, underpinning its epigenomic profiling ...
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