#genome-transfer

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#ai
Medicine
fromFast Company
15 hours ago

AI is coming for superbugs

AI can significantly enhance antibiotic discovery, addressing the urgent global health crisis of antibiotic resistance.
Medicine
fromFast Company
15 hours ago

AI is coming for superbugs

AI can significantly enhance antibiotic discovery, addressing the urgent global health crisis of antibiotic resistance.
Health
fromThe Washington Post
1 day ago

One way to live longer: Win the genetic lottery

Genetic factors account for about 50% of human lifespan, significantly higher than the previously estimated 20%.
Cannabis
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Scientists Gene Hacked a Plant So It Grows Five Types of Psychoactive Drugs at Once

Genetically engineered tobacco plants can produce five different psychedelics, potentially enabling sustainable production for therapeutic use.
fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

Anthropic buys biotech startup Coefficient Bio in $400M deal: reports | TechCrunch

Anthropic has purchased the stealth biotech AI startup Coefficient Bio in a $400 million stock deal, confirming its commitment to advancing healthcare and life sciences.
Venture
#biotech
Healthcare
from24/7 Wall St.
3 days ago

The Personalized Biotech Flywheel Cathie Wood Built Is Still a Winning Bet Today

The biggest biotech winners may be those providing essential data for personalized medicine rather than those offering direct cures.
Business
from24/7 Wall St.
6 days ago

Biotech Stocks Are Up About 35% in the Past Year and Analysts Say the Biggest Gains Are Still Ahead

The biotech sector is projected to grow significantly due to lower borrowing costs and increased M&A activity.
OMG science
fromNature
5 days ago

'Treasure trove' of antiviral proteins could inspire powerful molecular tools

Bacteria possess a vast array of antiviral proteins, identified through machine-learning algorithms, which could lead to innovative biotechnologies.
#cloning
Science
fromFuturism
6 days ago

A Startup Has Been Quietly Pitching Cloned Human Bodies to Transfer Your Brain Into

Cloning efforts have evolved from animals to controversial human embryo models, with ambitions for brainless human clones for organ transplants.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Scientists Cloned a Mouse, Then Cloned the Clone, Et Cetera. The Results Were Horrific

Cloning mice for 58 generations led to immediate death of offspring, revealing limits to mammalian cloning.
OMG science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Can a mouse be cloned indefinitely? Decades-long experiment has answers

Asexual reproduction in mice is unsustainable due to accumulating mutations, limiting the potential for successful cloning.
Science
fromFuturism
6 days ago

A Startup Has Been Quietly Pitching Cloned Human Bodies to Transfer Your Brain Into

Cloning efforts have evolved from animals to controversial human embryo models, with ambitions for brainless human clones for organ transplants.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Scientists Cloned a Mouse, Then Cloned the Clone, Et Cetera. The Results Were Horrific

Cloning mice for 58 generations led to immediate death of offspring, revealing limits to mammalian cloning.
OMG science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Can a mouse be cloned indefinitely? Decades-long experiment has answers

Asexual reproduction in mice is unsustainable due to accumulating mutations, limiting the potential for successful cloning.
Data science
fromMedium
4 days ago

In-Silico Perturbation Meets Single-Cell Foundation Models: From Zero-Shot Potential to Fine-Tuned...

In-silico perturbation simulates cellular state changes, but biological trustworthiness remains a challenge despite advancements in single-cell foundation models.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
13 hours ago

Traceability is vital': labs test thousands of unregulated substances amid peptide craze

The underground market for injectable peptides in the UK has surged, with thousands of unregulated substances being tested for safety and efficacy.
SF parents
fromHigh Country News
6 days ago

A DNA archive critical to identifying missing migrants has itself gone missing - High Country News

Colibrí Center's missing-persons database has become inaccessible, leaving families without hope for identifying missing migrants.
Silicon Valley
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Silicon Valley startup backed by Tim Draper pitches growing brainless human clones for organ harvesting and brain transplants - Silicon Canals

A Silicon Valley startup is developing brainless cloned human bodies for organ sourcing and potential brain transplants.
#crispr
#genomics
fromNature
6 days ago
Science

The 1000 Chinese Pangenome empowers medical and population genetics - Nature

fromTechCrunch
1 week ago
Data science

Mantis Biotech is making 'digital twins' of humans to help solve medicine's data availability problem | TechCrunch

fromNature
6 days ago
Science

The 1000 Chinese Pangenome empowers medical and population genetics - Nature

Data science
fromTechCrunch
1 week ago

Mantis Biotech is making 'digital twins' of humans to help solve medicine's data availability problem | TechCrunch

Large language models can enhance genomics and clinical practices, but struggle with rare diseases due to data scarcity.
from24/7 Wall St.
5 days ago

5 Biotechs That Big Pharma Could Snap Up as Oncology M&A Heats Up

Incyte tops this list due to its rare combination of commercial scale, cash generation, and pipeline depth. The company posted FY2025 revenue of $5.14 billion, up 21.2% YoY, anchored by Jakafi generating $828.2 million in Q4 2025 alone (+7% YoY) and Opzelura delivering $207.3 million (+28% YoY). With $3.58 billion in cash and 14 pivotal clinical trials underway, Incyte offers an acquirer immediate revenue, margin expansion potential, and a deep oncology pipeline spanning KRASG12D, CDK2 inhibition, and mutCALR.
Venture
Medicine
fromFast Company
4 days ago

The AI drug revolution is real but the hype around it isn't

AI may revolutionize drug discovery, but it cannot simplify the complexities of human biology or guarantee successful treatments.
#car-t-cell-therapy
Science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Zombieland: Genome transplant brings 'dead' bacteria back to life

Researchers have revived 'dead' bacterial cells by replacing their DNA with a working genome from another species, advancing genome engineering.
Artificial intelligence
fromFortune
2 weeks ago

Could data from 100 million species help cure disease? One startup is betting on it | Fortune

Basecamp Research launches the Trillion Gene Atlas to map genetic diversity across 100 million species, aiming to expand biological knowledge 100-fold through AI-powered genomic data collection.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
2 weeks ago

Lab-grown food pipe offers new hope for young patients

Scientists have successfully grown and transplanted fully functioning food pipes in mini pigs, offering hope for patients with oesophageal conditions.
Science
fromFuturism
2 weeks ago

Scientists Bring Mouse Brains Back to Life After "Cryosleep" Deep Freeze

Researchers are advancing towards cryosleep by restoring activity in mouse brains using vitrification, potentially aiding organ preservation and brain injury recovery.
Data science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 weeks ago

OpenAI and Ginkgo Bioworks show how AI can accelerate scientific discovery

OpenAI's GPT successfully designed and iterated on biology experiments autonomously, demonstrating AI capability in scientific hypothesis generation, experimental design, and result interpretation beyond summarization tasks.
Science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Synthetic circuits for cell ratio control - Nature

Synthetic biology enables artificial cell differentiation and division of labor by engineering genetic and epigenetic circuits that mimic natural stem cell asymmetric division processes.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Can scientists really resurrect the dodo? Inside the company that says they can

Colossal Biosciences, valued at $10.2bn after raising hundreds of millions of dollars in funding from investors including celebrities spanning from Tiger Woods to Paris Hilton, has provoked a stampede of acclaim as well as denunciation after announcing last year it had made the dire wolf, a species lost from the world for more than 10,000 years, de-extinct via the birth of three new pups.
OMG science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Masked mitochondria slip into cells to treat disease in mice

When mitochondria are exposed to tissue or blood, they lose the electrical gradient across their outer membrane. Mitochondria that lack such a gradient are recognized by a cell's internal machinery as damaged and quickly destroyed. The vast majority of previous studies involved injecting 'naked' mitochondria directly into the bloodstream or tissue sites, but the approach isn't very efficient, so researchers often have to use 'ridiculous' doses of mitochondria.
Medicine
Artificial intelligence
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago

ChatGPT might give you bad medical advice, studies warn

AI chatbots provide medical information to millions daily but often mislead users because people lack training in effectively communicating symptoms to these systems.
Silicon Valley
fromKqed
1 month ago

How South San Francisco Became the Birthplace of Biotechnology | KQED

South San Francisco transformed from an industrial meatpacking and steel manufacturing hub into the world's biotechnology capital, hosting over 250 biotech companies including Genentech.
Left-wing politics
fromTruthout
1 month ago

Reproductive Tech That Promises Smart Babies Is Peddling Soft Eugenics

Reproductive tech companies now offer embryo genetic screening for intelligence and disease, raising concerns about eugenics, disability discrimination, and wealth-based genetic enhancement.
Medicine
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

Everyone Is a Biohacker Now

Vyleesi, a prescription female libido drug, is being purchased off-label by men through online retailers exploiting 'research use only' disclaimers to circumvent prescription requirements.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

I clicked on a button and everything changed': how a DNA test turned my life upside-down

It was another detail that the rest of the family apparently knew but had never told me; they thought I already knew. The biology mattered less to me than the secret. Dad had been adopted, it turned out. A classic affliction of the 1950s, in which young, unmarried couples were forced to give away their newborn babies.
Books
Cancer
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Bacteria Engineered to Eat Tumors From the Inside

Researchers engineered Clostridium sporogenes bacteria to consume tumor cells from inside, offering a potential alternative to traditional cancer treatments.
Venture
from24/7 Wall St.
1 month ago

Forget AI. This Biotech Stock's Taking Off Right Now

AI stocks face correction risk due to rising capital expenditures without proportional profits, making biotech an undervalued alternative for AI-driven growth exposure.
Medicine
fromBusiness Matters
3 weeks ago

UK biotech Ternary raises 3.6m to scale AI platform for next-generation drugs

Ternary Therapeutics secured £3.6 million in seed funding to develop an AI-driven platform for engineering molecular glues, a new class of medicines that bring proteins together to destroy disease-causing targets.
Science
fromScienceDaily
3 weeks ago

A lab mistake at Cambridge reveals a powerful new way to modify drug molecules

Cambridge researchers developed an LED-powered photochemical technique that enables late-stage modification of complex drug molecules without toxic chemicals or metal catalysts, accelerating drug development.
Science
fromNature
4 weeks ago

From cancer to Alzheimer's: could a renewed focus on energy transform biomedicine?

Energy flow, governed by universal physics principles, provides a more fundamental understanding of biological processes and disease than molecular mechanisms alone.
Medicine
fromWIRED
3 weeks ago

Japan Approves the World's First Treatment Made With Reprogrammed Human Cells

ReHeart and Amusepri represent breakthrough cell transplant therapies addressing severe heart failure and Parkinson's disease by replacing damaged tissue with functional cells derived from iPS cells.
OMG science
fromNature
1 month ago

Why 'quantum proteins' could be the next big thing in biology

Fluorescent proteins from crystal jellyfish are being transformed into quantum bits to create highly sensitive quantum sensors for biological applications.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Large genome model: Open source AI trained on trillions of bases

Evo 2, an AI system trained on trillions of base pairs from all life domains, can identify genes, regulatory sequences, and splice sites in complex genomes including humans.
fromwww.nature.com
1 month ago

Genetically encoded assembly recorder temporally resolves cellular history

GEMINI leverages a computationally designed protein assembly as an intracellular memory device to record the history of individual cells. GEMINI grows predictably within live cells, capturing cellular events as tree-ring-like fluorescent patterns for imaging-based retrospective readout. Absolute chronological information of activity histories is attainable with hour-level accuracy.
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Pioneering gene therapy may treat a deadly seizure disorder

Gene therapy drug zorevunersen significantly reduces seizures in Dravet syndrome patients by targeting the underlying SCN1A gene mutation, offering hope for treatment-resistant cases.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 months ago

The Moral Life of Organs in an Age of Technological Innovation

Transplant technology is rapidly expanding organ viability through advanced perfusion, preservation, and logistics while implementation outpaces oversight and public input.
Tech industry
from24/7 Wall St.
2 months ago

NVIDIA Just Made a Bigger Push Into AI Drug Discovery

Nvidia's stock has traded sideways for six months despite strong AI demand and strategic deals that may enable an eventual breakout.
Public health
fromNature
2 months ago

Nationwide genetic screening proves effective at catching disease risk early

Early genetic screening in young adults can identify hereditary cancer and familial hypercholesterolaemia risk before symptoms, but generalizability and cost-benefit require evaluation.
Medicine
fromTheregister
1 month ago

MIT researchers test injectable 'satellite liver' in mice

MIT researchers developed an injectable 'satellite liver' using hepatocytes and hydrogel microspheres that successfully restored liver function in mice for eight weeks without requiring surgery.
fromNews Center
1 month ago

AI Model May Improve RNA Sequencing Research - News Center

Scientists in the laboratory of Rendong Yang, PhD, associate professor of Urology, have developed a new large language model that can interpret transcriptomic data in cancer cell lines more accurately than conventional approaches, as detailed in a recent study published in Nature Communications. Long-read RNA sequencing technologies have transformed transcriptomics research by detecting complex RNA splicing and gene fusion events that have often been missed by conventional short-read RNA-sequencing methods.
Cancer
fromNature
1 month ago

AI tools can design genomes. Will they upend how life evolves?

Biology is undergoing a transformation. After centuries of studying life as it evolves naturally, researchers are now using a combination of computation and genome engineering to intervene, generating new proteins and even whole bacteria from scratch. The use of artificial-intelligence tools to design biological components, an approach known as generative biology, is set to turbocharge this area of research. Just last year, scientists used AI-assisted design to produce artificial genes that can be expressed in mammalian cells.
Science
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

A membrane-bound nuclease directly cleaves phage DNA during genome injection - Nature

SNIPE is a membrane-bound nuclease defense system in bacteria that directly targets foreign nucleic acids to prevent phage infection through a novel mechanism distinct from established defense pathways.
#ai-drug-discovery
fromFortune
2 months ago
Science

AI drug startup Insilico Medicine launches an AI 'gym' to help models like GPT and Qwen be good at science | Fortune

fromFortune
2 months ago
Science

AI drug startup Insilico Medicine launches an AI 'gym' to help models like GPT and Qwen be good at science | Fortune

fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Have we leapt into commercial genetic testing without understanding it?

Martschenko's argument is largely that genetic research and data have almost always been used thus far as a justification to further entrench extant social inequalities. But we know the solutions to many of the injustices in our world-trying to lift people out of poverty, for example-and we certainly don't need more genetic research to implement them. Trejo's point is largely that more information is generally better than less.
Science
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

The very long road from a cancer cure' in mice to one in humans

Promising mouse cancer cures often fail to become safe, effective human drugs; premature media claims can create false patient expectations and hinder responsible research progress.
OMG science
fromNature
2 months ago

Regulatory grammar in human promoters uncovered by MPRA-based deep learning - Nature

Massively parallel reporter assays provide cell-type-specific causal training data enabling more direct inference of DNA sequence effects on promoter activity than epigenomic maps.
OMG science
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Why did that cancer cell become drug-resistant? - Harvard Gazette

TimeVault records and stores cellular gene-expression history inside living cells, enabling retrieval of past gene-activity information to study differentiation, stress responses, adaptation, and drug resistance.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Construction of complex and diverse DNA sequences using DNA three-way junctions - Nature

DNA writing remains limited by short oligo synthesis and two-way junction assembly methods, hindering affordable, scalable construction of large, complex synthetic DNA.
Medicine
fromThe Washington Post
1 month ago

David Liu unlocks the power of gene editing to treat rare genetic diseases

Base and prime gene-editing technologies can precisely correct genetic mutations, enabling personalized therapies that can cure life-threatening inherited diseases.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 months ago

Scalable and multiplexed recorders of gene regulation dynamics across weeks

CytoTape enables multiplexed, genetically encoded, spatiotemporally scalable recording of gene regulation dynamics in single cells for up to three weeks with minute-scale resolution.
Science
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Scientists use AI to create a virus never seen before

Scientists used AI and gene-assembly tools to create Evo-Φ2147, a novel 11-gene virus designed to kill pathogenic E. coli.
Medicine
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Their Mutated Genes Were Supposed to Be Harmless

People who carry single-gene mutations for disorders like thalassemia can experience real health effects, including lethargy and fainting, despite being labeled asymptomatic.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Google DeepMind unleashes new AI to investigate DNA's dark matter'

AlphaGenome predicts functional effects of mutations in long noncoding DNA sequences up to one million base pairs, helping interpret genomic variants for disease research.
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

China's biotech boom: why the nation must collaborate to stay ahead

China leads in drug manufacturing and biotech innovation, but geopolitical scrutiny and moves toward a closed biotech ecosystem threaten scientific collaboration and global medicine access.
Science
fromWIRED
2 months ago

He Went to Prison for Gene-Editing Babies. Now He's Planning to Do It Again

He Jiankui created the first gene-edited babies, was jailed and banned, and now seeks to resume controversial genetic research despite widespread germline-editing prohibitions.
#alphagenome
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

RNA-triggered Cas12a3 cleaves tRNA tails to execute bacterial immunity - Nature

Some immune systems inactivate tRNAs to impair viral protein synthesis, and certain Cas nucleases, like LshCas13a, can cleave tRNA anticodon loops.
fromTNW | Deep-Tech
1 month ago

Aerska raises $39M to help RNA medicines reach the brain

For families living with neurodegenerative disease, the hardest part is not always the diagnosis. It is the slow erosion that follows: memory fading, personality shifting, independence shrinking. It unfolds quietly. First, forgotten appointments. Then repeated questions. Then moments when a familiar face no longer feels familiar. The illness does not isolate itself to one body. It rearranges the lives around it.
Medicine
Medicine
fromIntelligencer
2 months ago

Did AI Alter the Course of This Baby's Life?

A newborn, Jorie, was diagnosed with DeSanto-Shinawi syndrome, a rare, incurable genetic disorder causing neurodevelopmental and physical challenges, with limited treatment options.
Science
fromAxios
1 month ago

The narrow slice of data that worries biosecurity experts

Certain biological datasets that materially increase misuse risk should be governed like sensitive health records while most biological data remains openly accessible.
Medicine
fromLGBTQ Nation
2 months ago

These 4 promising breakthroughs are bringing HIV researchers closer to a cure - LGBTQ Nation

Significant scientific advances have produced promising combination therapies and experimental approaches that have eliminated HIV in rare cases but no widely scalable cure exists yet.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

'Remote controlled' proteins illuminate living cells

Engineered magnetically sensitive fluorescent proteins enable remote modulation of brightness in cells and animals, offering quantum-based control for biosensors and potential therapies.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

A 'time capsule for cells' stores the secret experiences of their past

Engineered TimeVaults capture and store cellular mRNA to continuously record past transcriptional activity, enabling retrospective study of cellular history and responses.
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