For decades, Arieh Warshel, USC Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and a 2013 Nobel laureate, has used computer simulations ...
Some children recover better after traumatic brain injury than others, despite appearing similarly to doctors. Looking at the ...
In a landmark case reported in the Journal of Hepatology, Chinese surgeons have shown that a genetically modified pig liver ...
A new study has developed a powerful computational method that can detect how genes interact with each other to influence ...
A combination of two therapies, azacitidine and venetoclax, or aza-ven, outperformed intensive chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia in patients healthy enough to receive aggressive treatment, ...
In a Maryland operating room one day in November 2025, doctors made medical history by transplanting a genetically modified ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A tiny worm may reveal how the brain regulates aging
A one millimeter worm is helping scientists rethink what controls the pace of aging. By tracing how its tiny brain senses the world and broadcasts hormonal commands, researchers are starting to see ...
An analysis of Buckeye butterflies finds that they aren't just changing colors with the seasons, but changing the way they see on a physiological level.
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
How genetic engineering could reshape medicine and human life
Genetic engineering is moving from the lab bench into clinics, farms, and even family planning decisions, promising to change ...
Tiny structures inside your cells keep your body alive by turning food into fuel. These structures, called mitochondria, ...
Deep inside your nervous system, a tiny fault in how cells make energy can quietly change the course of a life. That hidden ...
In southern Africa, a group of people lived in partial isolation for hundreds of thousands of years. This is shown in a new ...
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