Valerie Strauss
Nicky thinks she’s thin because of the way she eats, but actually, genetics play a huge role in making her thin. Nicky gets all the credit though, because people see the way she eats and they can’t see her genes. ...
about cancer genetics and biology, 了解癌症遗传学和生物学的重要见解 but they lack much of the complexity of a tumor in an actual living organism. 但它们缺乏实际活在有机体中的肿瘤的复杂性 It's frequently the case that new drugs, which work on these lab-grown cells, 通常在实验室生长的细胞...
So, genetics can affect a child’s susceptibility to lead poisoning. But they never conclude anywhere in scientific literature that lead poisoning is a disease. So familial ALS could be similar. A family’s genes either hurt or help their resistance to the poison. ...
Genetics 172: 1309–1323. Nogueira T, Rankin DJ, Touchon M, Taddei F, Brown SP, Rocha EP (2009). Gene mobility drives the evolution of bacterial cooperation and virulence. Curr Biol 19: 1683–1691. Norman A, Hansen LH, Sorensen SJ (2009). Conjugative plasmids: vessels of the communal ...
In fact, catsarerather cleverer than commonly assumed, as the biologist andanimal-behaviourexpertJohnBradshawshowsinhisnewbook.TheycanevenbetrainedtoanextentwhichwasnewstomeBradshaw’sbookmixespelletsofcatlorewithaccounts offelineevolution,anatomy,geneticsanddevelopmentfromnewborn kitten to adulthood, plus ...
The production of infectious aerosols can vary wildly between individuals—and experts are exploring why in the COVID-19 era.
An example of this is from Catherine Dulac’s group in which they investigated the genetics of sex differences in the brain by comparing parent-of-origin allelic gene expression and found that imprinted genes inherited from maternal or paternal origin were dependent on the offspring sex as well ...
Genetics, 186 (2010), pp. 431-433 CrossrefView in ScopusGoogle Scholar 40 D. Haig, C.T. Bergstrom Multiple mating, sperm competition and meiotic drive J. Theor. Biol., 8 (1995), pp. 265-282 CrossrefView in ScopusGoogle Scholar 41 A. Burt, R. Trivers Genes in Conflict: The Biology...
N. MAJERUS Department of Genetics, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EH, U.K. Maternally-inherited male killing microorganisms are known in a number of insect species. We here discuss the evolutionary reasons for such behaviour through examining the ongoing dynamics of these elements. In cases where...