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Biology

1 in 500 men carry extra sex chromosome raising risk of diseases: Study

Fecal Transplants Reverse Hallmarks of Aging

Link Between Parkinson’s Gene and Vocal Issues Could Lead To Earlier Diagnosis

New Insights on Gene Activity and Addiction

Gut microbiome may influence the risk and severity of stroke

Brain Connectivity Changes Revealed in Individuals With Pre-clinical Alzheimer’s Disease

How Antidepressants Treat Nerve Pain

Does Autism Begin in the Womb?

Gene Therapy Reverses Effects of Autism-Linked Mutation in Brain Organoids

Drug to treat Alcoholism could also Safely reduce Anxiety

T cells and viruses, an unlikely duo, team up to kill tumors

Researchers want to fight cancer by mutating it even more

RNA breakthrough offers a potential heart attack cure

New Function Performed by Nearly Half of Brain Cells Discovered

Is It Biologically Possible To Become A Benjamin Button?

All of the bases in DNA and RNA have now been found in meteorites

Meteorites could have brought all 5 genetic 'letters' of DNA to early Earth

New Gene Editing Tool Targets the Powerhouse of the Cell

Ancient Genes for Symbiosis Hint at Mitochondria’s Origins

Brisk Walking can slow down the Biological Aging Process

What Did Neanderthals Evolve From?

Mitochondria Bundle as Tiny Lenses in the Eye

Massive DNA study of human cancers offers new clues about their causes

'Vagina Obscura' shows how little is had some significant awareness of female science 

Matching prescriptions tMatching meds to DNA is 'new time of medicine'o DNA is 'new season of drug' 

Interesting genital imperfections found in children of men taking significant diabetes drug

Advances in Gene-editing might Cure HIV 

Engineered Bacteria for Curing Parkinson’s disease

Newly sequenced DNA plays a foundational role in biology.

A Study on the impact of DNA evidence in sexual assault prosecutions

Scientists just identified over 5,500 new viruses in the ocean

Scientists reveal why long COVID can cause pain

A Strange Genetic Link Between Humans And Sea Anemones Is Just Confirmed

Scientists discover a new way to rejuvenate aging skin cells

Scientists Identify Genetic Link Between Blood Test Results And Few Mental Disorders

Why a fight over DNA data imperils a global conservation pact

A leap forward in DNA sequencing alludes to why most smokers don't get cellular breakdown in the lungs

The Newest way to preserve good gut bacteria from Antibiotics

How Immune Cells Spot Their Targets

Demodex: the mites living in your face

These Microbes Breathe Methane And Turn It Into Electricity in a Weird Living Battery

Bacterial sensing via neuronal Nod2 regulates appetite and body temperature

A New plasmid DNA plant to ease regenerative medicine bottlenecks

Unraveling Stem Cells’ Secrets: Immortality of Germline Cells and the Function of “Junk DNA”

Your Blood Type Does Affect your Health

Traversing Narrow Channels Helps Metastatic Cancer Cells Survive

A Weird Effect When Honeybees Fly Over a Mirror

Researchers stimulate blind retinas using focused ultrasound technology

What tangled headphones can teach us about DNA

Study shows simple, computationally-light model can simulate complex brain cell responses

Another Species of Homonin may Still be Alive

Genetic in Animals Shed New Light on Aging

Entirely New Immune System Discovered in Bacteria

Why Is Blood Made In The Bone Marrow?

Lab-grown stem cells fix muscle injury and disease, study shows

AI Drug Discovery Systems Might Be Repurposed to Make Chemical Weapons, Researchers Warn

Your gut microbiome could be telling your brain when you are hungry

Massive DNA study of human cancers offers new clues about their causes

Mitochondria Bundle as Tiny Lenses in the Eye

What Did Neanderthals Evolve From?

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Ancient Genes for Symbiosis Hint at Mitochondria’s Origins

  Once, some time in the past, the main players in the excellent show of life, predation and demise were undetectably little and basic cells. Archaea and microorganisms jigged and spun through oceans and lakes, collected themselves into forts a couple of microns wide, and ate up movies of natural matter. Then some of them started to change, and in the long run the principal eukaryote — the primary living being to keep its qualities locked away in a core, to fix its inside with ramifying compartments, and, critically, to utilize mitochondria to make energy — showed up on the scene. We and the remainder of life noticeable to the unaided eye are the relatives of that cell, the last normal precursor, everything being equal. Researchers actually see generally minimal about what occurred during that change. One of the focal problems is the means by which and when our eukaryotic predecessor procured its mitochondria, the stalwart organelles that create the cell's energy. The mitochondrion...

What is synaesthesia?

  Around 4% of individuals experience some sort of synaesthesia. Synaesthesia is a perceptual peculiarity where feeling of one sense triggers encounters in another sense. For instance, a synaesthete could see colors when music plays, or taste flavors when they express various words. The word synaesthesia begins from the Greek words 'syn' for association and 'aesthesis' for sensation, in a real sense meaning 'an association of the faculties'. There are north of 70 sorts of synaesthesia, which cause relationship between various kinds of tactile information, however what they all share for all intents and purpose is that the affiliations are compulsory, present from youth, and stay reliable over the course of life. It is imagined that synaesthesia is brought about by additional network between tactile districts of the mind, so excitement of one sense cross-actuates the other. During the 1990s, sound-variety synaesthetes were blindfolded and placed into a fMRI scann...

How many types of galaxies are in the universe?

  A world is a gathering of galactic items that are bound gravitationally. Consider planets and their normal satellites, comets and space rocks, stars and heavenly remainders, (for example, neutron stars or white diminutive people), the interstellar gasses between them, enormous residue, and inestimable beams, dull matter, and so forth. This large number of things are kept intact by the power of gravity that keeps them drawn to one another to frame a framework. This framework is known as a system. The universe is brimming with worlds. Researchers have assessed various quantities of worlds on account of information gathered by telescopes and interplanetary space tests, for example, NASA's Hubble Telescope and NASA's New Horizon shuttle. In 2020, they determined that there were around two trillion worlds in the perceptible universe. As you can envision, not these worlds have similar qualities, and they most certainly don't appear to be identical. Stargazers have perceived a f...