#genetic-liability

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Medicine
fromNature
1 day ago

Saturation editing of RNU4-2 reveals distinct dominant and recessive disorders - Nature

De novo variants in RNU4-2 cause ReNU syndrome, a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by developmental delays and other severe symptoms.
#aging
OMG science
fromNature
2 days ago

This method to reverse cellular ageing is about to be tested in humans

Yuancheng Ryan Lu's research on reprogramming retinal nerve cells could lead to restoring eyesight and rejuvenating organs.
Health
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

100 experts were unable to agree on whether aging is an illness, or when it begins

Aging lacks a universally accepted definition, with significant disagreement among experts on its causes and implications.
OMG science
fromNature
2 days ago

This method to reverse cellular ageing is about to be tested in humans

Yuancheng Ryan Lu's research on reprogramming retinal nerve cells could lead to restoring eyesight and rejuvenating organs.
Health
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

100 experts were unable to agree on whether aging is an illness, or when it begins

Aging lacks a universally accepted definition, with significant disagreement among experts on its causes and implications.
#genetics
fromNature
1 day ago
Medicine

Why obesity drugs work better for some people: these genes hold clues

Health
fromThe Washington Post
3 days 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%.
Medicine
fromNature
1 day ago

Why obesity drugs work better for some people: these genes hold clues

Genetic variants influence individual responses to obesity drugs, affecting weight loss and side effects.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 hours ago

Genetics may help explain why results from weight-loss jabs vary, say scientists

Genetic variations in gut hormone pathways may explain differing responses to weight-loss medications like GLP1 receptor agonists.
Medicine
fromNews Center
6 days ago

Uncovering a Genetic Driver of Rare Early-Onset Dementia - News Center

A new genetic risk factor for early-onset frontotemporal dementia has been identified, significantly increasing the odds of developing the disease.
#gene-editing
Cannabis
fromFuturism
3 days 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.
Data science
fromMedium
6 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.
#genomics
fromNature
1 week 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
1 week 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.
LGBT
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Why Identical Twins Can Have Different Sexual Orientations

Sexual orientation may have genetic links, but identical twins can have different orientations due to epigenetics and prenatal hormone exposure.
#crispr
#cloning
Science
fromFuturism
1 week 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
1 week 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.
fromSlate Magazine
2 weeks ago

Jeffrey Epstein Had an Obsession With DNA. It's Part of a Dark History.

A strange part of the strange life of Jeffrey Epstein was his obsession with the genome. And with ways to "improve" that genome-including by adding more of his own genes to humanity's gene pool. Epstein, culpable for so much, was also a believer in eugenics, the manipulation of reproduction and of genes to create "better" humans.
Right-wing politics
Medicine
fromNature
2 days ago

Scientists invented a fake disease. AI told people it was real

Bixonimania is a fabricated medical condition that highlights the dangers of misinformation in AI-generated health advice.
fromNature
3 weeks ago

In vivo site-specific engineering to reprogram T cells - Nature

Using CRISPR-Cas9 and adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated homology-directed repair, we targeted CAR integration into the endogenous human TCR alpha locus (TRAC). TRAC-CAR T cells display dynamic CAR expression that delays exhaustion and improves tumour control in xenograft and immunocompetent models. This work has been critical for the development of allogeneic CAR T cell therapy, as it disrupts the TCR after transgene insertion—a necessary step to limit graft-versus-host disease.
Cancer
fromFast Company
2 days ago

AI is coming for superbugs

Antibiotics are essential for modern medicine, but bacteria are evolving and developing resistance, turning routine infections into life-threatening conditions. A global analysis estimates that antibiotic-resistant infections could cause over 39 million deaths by 2050.
Medicine
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days 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.
Artificial intelligence
fromwww.npr.org
4 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.
Science
fromNature
3 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.
Health
fromInsideHook
3 weeks ago

Medical Experts Recommend a Genetic Test for Heart Disease Risk

The American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology now recommend genetic testing for lipoprotein(a) to identify heart disease risk factors unaffected by diet and lifestyle changes.
fromNature
1 week ago

DNA damage burden causes selective CUX2 neuron loss in neuroinflammation - Nature

DNA damage can originate from internal sources like metabolic by-products or normal cellular activities, as well as external factors such as cosmic radiation, diet, and pollution.
Medicine
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Genetic Map Redrawing the Borders of Mental Illness

Five broad genetic families underlie 14 psychiatric disorders, suggesting diagnostic categories reflect shared biological landscapes rather than distinct diseases.
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.
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.
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
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Three sisters and a dilemma: what to do when you inherit a genetic mutation that can cause cancer

Three sisters discovered they carry the BRCA1 gene mutation, which significantly increases breast and ovarian cancer risk, after their cousin's rapid cancer diagnosis prompted family genetic testing.
Healthcare
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Unbelievably dangerous': experts sound alarm after ChatGPT Health fails to recognise medical emergencies

ChatGPT Health fails to recognize medical emergencies in over half of cases, potentially endangering users by recommending home care instead of emergency department visits.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
2 weeks ago

Scotland becomes first in UK to test newborns for rare genetic condition

Scotland is the first UK region to test newborns for Spinal Muscular Atrophy, enabling early treatment to improve life expectancy.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Daily briefing: How DNA testing can tell identical twins apart

Advanced forensic techniques including whole-genome sequencing and epigenetic analysis can differentiate between identical twins in criminal investigations, while GLP-1 drugs show potential in reducing addiction across multiple substances, and researchers have successfully synthesized hexagonal diamond.
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.
#genetic-screening
fromNature
2 months ago
Public health

Nationwide genetic screening proves effective at catching disease risk early

fromNature
2 months ago
Public health

Nationwide genetic screening proves effective at catching disease risk early

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
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.
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.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Twin Studies and the Role of Genetics in Religious Belief

Parental upbringing shapes childhood religious participation, while genetic factors influence adult religious interest and involvement; identical twins can show strong similarity even when reared apart.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Very Different Psychiatric Diagnoses Share Common Genes

Alcohol, cannabis, opioid, and nicotine use disorders share substantial genetic liability and cluster together as a single brain disorder, supporting a unified addiction-liability.
fromNature
1 month ago

Is a 'selfish gene' making a Utah family have twice as many boys as girls?

Such sex 'distorters' have been discovered - and studied in great depth - in laboratory animals such as mice and flies, in which their effects can be detected through selective breeding. 'If you look, more often than not, you find them,' says Nitin Phadnis, an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, who co-led the study.
Science
Cancer
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Douglas Hanahan, biologist: We don't necessarily need a cure, what we really need is cancer without disease'

Cancer cells acquire hallmarks: uncontrolled proliferation, evasion of growth barriers, resistance to programmed death, and relative immortality, driving tumor diversity and treatment variability.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 months ago

Groundbreaking visuals capture how our bodies repair damaged DNA | Aeon Videos

Drew Berry creates striking biomedical animations that visualize microscopic biological processes like DNA repair, revealing intricate evolution-shaped cellular mechanisms.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Global Study Identifies Genetic Links to Depression

Genetic analyses have identified hundreds of variants linked to depression and revealed existing non-psychiatric drugs as potential treatment candidates.
Public health
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Genetic tests for cancer on NHS to help families detect Jolie' gene

The NHS will build a 120-gene database to improve cancer prevention, enabling earlier screening and personalised treatments for patients and at-risk family members.
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.
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
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
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Effect of Family History on Brain Injury

Knowing one’s family history and cultural roots is essential to reclaim identity, process grief, and repair relationships after catastrophic brain injury.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

How long you live may depend much more on your genes than scientists thought

Heritability of human lifespan roughly doubles to about 50% when extrinsic mortality is removed, showing a stronger genetic influence on intrinsic aging.
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Developmental convergence and divergence in human stem cell models of autism - Nature

Distinct rare mutations and common genetic variation jointly shape ASD risk, yet convergent molecular pathology and early fetal neurodevelopmental mechanisms can be studied using stem-cell models.
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Jeffrey Epstein Had a Bizarre Obsession With "Improving" Human DNA, and He Was Emailing With Top Scientists About It

The newly released documents from the Justice Department shine additional light on how the convicted child sex criminal exhibited a fascination with transhumanism, a controversial movement in science and philosophy with a eugenicist mission: using cutting edge technology, including genetic engineering and AI, to advance the biology of the human race. They also reinforce how serious Epstein was about pursuing these ideas.
Science
Medicine
fromNature
2 months ago

How DeepMind's genome AI could help solve rare disease mysteries

AlphaGenome uses AI to predict effects of non-coding DNA mutations, helping interpret previously triaged variants and aiding diagnosis of undiagnosed rare diseases.
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
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.
Medicine
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Longevity Medicine Is Being Oversold

Modern longevity medicine is booming due to social-media-driven marketing despite limited placebo-controlled evidence and risks of patient harm.
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.
fromNews Center
2 months ago

Experimental Drug Shows Promise for Rare Genetic Disorder - News Center

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPS II), or Hunter syndrome, is a rare genetic disorder primarily affecting boys, caused by a deficiency in the enzyme needed to break down sugar molecules. This harmful buildup in cells and tissues impacts multiple body systems, causing frequent infections, organ enlargement and developmental disabilities. Management involves supportive care and enzyme replacement therapy, as there is currently no cure,
Medicine
Science
fromNews Center
2 months ago

New Underlying Mechanisms May Support Proper Transcriptional Regulation and Improve Targeted Therapies - News Center

BET proteins, particularly BRD4, regulate transcription initiation and elongation independently of bromodomains, with implications for targeted therapeutic development.
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.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Turns out inherited eye diseases aren't a sure thing - Harvard Gazette

Only a minority of people carrying certain inherited eye-disease gene variants actually develop the disease, exposing strong ascertainment bias and new therapeutic opportunities.
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