Scientists from the Institut Pasteur have genetically analyzed the remains of former soldiers who retreated from Russia in 1812.
Sequencing genomic material extracted from the teeth of 13 soldiers in Napoleon’s troops highlighted that more diseases than previously thought affected the army.
What if a single test could simultaneously contribute to the diagnosis, characterization, and treatment guidance of childhood ...
Disease-causing bacteria that have been recently discovered in the teeth of Napoleonic soldiers may have spurred the massive ...
Researchers at Trinity Translational Medicine Institute (TTMI) and the Irish Mycobacterial Reference Laboratory at St James's ...
In a groundbreaking discovery, scientists have unearthed 6,000-year-old human skeletons in Colombia that possess a DNA ...
A man with neurofibromas who didn't know he's been clinically diagnosed with NF1, learns he harbors a deeply intronic, likely ...
But in reality, they’re microscopic robots made of DNA and metal that move in response to their environment. In a study ...
Shendure directs the Allen Discovery Center for Cell Lineage at the Allen Institute and the Brotman Baty Institute for ...
Boston researchers sequenced a full human genome in record time, under four hours. The advance could speed life-saving diagnoses for newborns in intensive care. Boston Children’s Hospital, in ...
In a breakthrough that redefines both speed and clinical potential, a new world record for the fastest human whole genome ...
The goal of gene therapy is to permanently cure hereditary diseases. One of the most promising technologies for this is the ...