Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
This genetic mutation helps yaks survive at high elevations. It could lead to treatments for nerve damage in humans
Some animals, including yaks and Tibetan antelopes, thrive at high elevations where oxygen levels are low. In humans, however ...
Scientists have identified a genetic mutation that helps protect the brain function of animals that live in high-altitude, ...
A genetic mutation that helps animals like yaks and Tibetan antelopes survive at high altitudes may hold the key to repairing ...
Scientists showed that a mutation in animals that live at high altitude promotes myelin regeneration, informing potential new ...
Researchers have pinpointed a gene mutation associated with survival at high altitudes that could restore myelin to damaged ...
Scientists identify a high-altitude genetic mutation in yaks that produces ATDR, a Vitamin A metabolite that repairs myelin damage in MS and cerebral paralysis.
A collection of over 40,000 trees in rural Utah is the world’s largest single organism, having all descended from a single seedling. But that’s not all: According to a team of researchers, the ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
How somatic mutations shape disease and reveal new drug targets
By Tarun Sai Lomte Scientists reveal how evolution within our own tissues can drive disease, protect cells, and uncover ...
Carlsberg has developed a method using digital PCR to identify specific nucleotide mutations in mutated genes. The process involves random mutagenesis, dividing organisms into sub-pools, PCR ...
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