From rare diseases to chronic conditions, epigenetic editing unlocks new ways to control gene activity without altering the genetic code.
Cancer isn't just about broken genes-it's about broken architecture. Imagine a city where roads suddenly vanish, cutting off neighborhoods from essential services.
Researchers demonstrated that it is feasible to encode executable payloads into synthetic DNA that, once sequenced and ...
More than a decade after the first Neanderthal genome was sequenced, scientists are still working to understand how ...
From enabling more sustainable practices, to solving supply chain issues and inspiring creativity, here’s how biotech is ...
RFdiffusion2, RFdiffusion3, and Riff-Diff each solve different structural problems in computational enzyme design ...
A team of scientists at the University of Minnesota has uncovered the routes by which zebra mussels spread through Minnesota ...
Using lung cancer biospecimens from the Sherlock-Lung study, an international team led by National Institutes of Health (NIH) ...
DNA synthesis is going global. The biosecurity rules aren’t keeping up.
Biological age tests promise insights into aging, but are they accurate or useful? What science shows about benefits, limits, ...
This article explores how challenges such as sequence optimization, immune activation and off-target effects are being ...