Learn how birds and mammals share the same genetic toolkit that helps them develop their faces, and why they don't look the ...
New genetic link: Scientists pinpoint PTCHD1-AS on the X chromosome as influencing social and repetitive behaviours in autism ...
Researchers at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto have discovered a gene may be responsible for the behaviours ...
Researchers have pinpointed a long non-coding gene that plays a distinct role in the social and stereotypic repetitive ...
A long‑overlooked stretch of the human genome appears to play a distinct role in shaping the social and stereotypic ...
A new study identifies PTCHD1-AS as a key non-coding gene that shapes social and repetitive behaviors in autism without affecting cognition.
A long-overlooked stretch of the human genome appears to play a distinct role in shaping the social and stereotypic ...
Hosted on MSN
Unraveling the secrets written in our DNA
Origins of the code: University of Illinois researchers found that the genetic code’s origins are tied to dipeptide composition, offering clues to life’s earliest evolution. Beyond coding DNA: Most ...
The diversity of facial shapes in birds and mammals is due to variations in non-coding DNA sequences Same genes, different ...
Birds and mammals use the same genes to build their face, but deploy them differently in time and space. Cells and evolutionary change: The undifferentiated facial mesenchyme emerges as an essential ...
Improved analysis adds several microproteins to the human proteome, and suggests a path toward identifying thousands more ...
From studying microRNAs in embryonic stem cells to exploring exosomes in anti-tumor immunity, Blelloch illustrates how ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results