People with allergies or asthma have more diverse fungal communities thriving in their noses, according to new research.
The NanoGripper, made from a single piece of folded DNA, was shown to detect covid-19 and block infections.
Humanity's once-steady rise in life expectancy is now slowing down, raising the question of whether we're about to reach the ceiling of our longevity.
MIT researchers and others tracked a massive swarm of cod fish off the coast of Norway as they ate millions of migrating capelin fish.
The first video footage of an egg beginning its journey could lead to major breakthroughs in fertility treatment.
The combined comb jellyfish synced up their movements, melded their nervous systems, and even joined their digestive tracts.
The newly found wasp appears to be common in the eastern United States, and inflicts Lynchian body horror onto its hosts.
Researchers say they created a synthetic, human-ish embryos will help prevent the loss of life.
A Scottish woman in her 70s has lived a life without pain and fear. New research pinpoints unique mutations in her DNA.
Genetically engineered E. coli strains killed a variety of different cancer types in mice.
The Human Pangenome Project hopes to establish a better reference genome for research, and scientists are already learning new things.
The Zoonomia project is the largest collection of mammalian genomes ever assembled—but, sadly, the raccoon isn't among them.
The massive marine mammals go into a cruise-control corkscrew during their submarine slumbers.
Cedars-Sinai researchers are working with Axiom Space to test if stem cells can be easily produced and grown aboard the International Space Station.
20 years after the Human Genome Project, Richard Gibbs shares his thoughts on Gattaca , tech breakthroughs, and more.
"It simply changed the way that people thought that biology could be done."
Researchers in China implanted the structures in three surrogate monkeys, but they did not become viable fetuses.
New research sheds light on the little-known processes of photosynthesis and could lead to better solar power.
The "New York Patient" has been free of HIV for six years after a stem cell transplant.
The Last of Us may be more real than you think. The spread of fungal pathogens in humans and other species are a disaster waiting to happen.
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