Comparing features of a common laboratory fruit fly with its rarer cousin collected from Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park, researchers used CRISPR technology to uncover clues about how high-level control genes called Hox genes shape our appearance.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/11/211110145410.htm
Friday, 12 November 2021
Related Posts
Solving a Parkinson's disease puzzle through protein designScientists have developed a computational protein design approach, and… Read More
Crop pathogens 'remarkably adaptable'Pathogens that attack agricultural crops show remarkable adaptability … Read More
Cascade sets the stage for superconductivity in magic-angle twisted bilayer grapheneThe researchers used scanning tunneling microscopy to observe what hap… Read More
Scientists apply 'twistronics' to light propagation and make a breakthrough discoveryA research team has employed ''twistronics'' concepts (the science of … Read More
Half the earth relatively intact from global human influenceIf we act quickly and decisively, there is a slim window in which we c… Read More
Lack of mitochondria causes severe disease in childrenResearchers have discovered that excessive degradation of the power pl… Read More
0 comments: