Colossal Biosciences announced it has genetically engineered the Colossal Woolly Mouse, which has a warm coat like the woolly mammoth.
Creation of a comprehensive genetic representation for more than 2.5 billion people across the Middle East and South Asia could make a major contribution towards advancing precision medicine.
Scientists have uncovered new genetic clues that explain why some prostate cancers remain slow-growing while others become life-threatening.
Creation of a comprehensive genetic representation for more than 2.5 billion people across the Middle East and South Asia ...
For the first time, large-scale DNA sequence data on three U.K. long-term birth cohorts has been released, creating a unique resource to explore the relationship between genetic and environmental ...
Colossal Biosciences, a Texas tech startup best known for its goal to resurrect the extinct woolly mammoth, has created genetically engineered mice with “mammoth-like traits,” it announced on March 4.
The animals, the first to have been created by Colossal Biosciences, have fluffy coats and curly whiskers.
RNA sequencing has emerged as a powerful supplement to DNA sequencing for Mendelian disease diagnosis, but clinical ...
Our DNA is constantly under threat — from cell division errors to external factors like sunlight and smoking. Fortunately, ...
Two new landmark studies show how a seeming tangle of DNA is actually organized into a structure that coordinates thousands ...
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