Whether you turn red when drinking alcohol, dislike certain smells, or metabolize drugs differently from others, the explanation often lies in your DNA, or more precisely, your gene types.
Researchers have identified specific coupled patterns of brain activity and gene expression that help explain impulsive ...
A new database covering over 100 different canine tissues can significantly enhance our understanding of hereditary diseases and provide valuable information for health research in both dogs and ...
Two-year data showed significant functional improvements in patients treated with delandistrogene moxeparvovec compared to controls, despite initial trial endpoint failure. The treated group exhibited ...
Analyzing stochastic cell-to-cell variability can potentially reveal causal interactions in gene regulatory networks.
This study presents SynaptoGen, a differentiable extension of connectome models that links gene expression, protein-protein interaction probabilities, synaptic multiplicity, and synaptic weights, and ...
If stretched out, human DNA would be about 2 meters long. For this long strand to fit inside the cell nucleus, which is about ...
The rapid expansion of high-throughput sequencing technologies has generated unprecedented amounts of multi-omics data, essential to advancing research in biodiversity, evolution, agriculture, ...