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8 votes
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AI for bio: State of the field
2 votes -
Neuralink: PRIME study progress update — second participant
8 votes -
Maglev titanium heart now whirs inside the chest of a live patient
24 votes -
Six distinct types of depression identified in Stanford Medicine-led study
51 votes -
IVF alone can’t save us from a looming fertility crisis
20 votes -
How AI revolutionized protein science, but didn’t end it
16 votes -
Smiling robot face is made from living human skin cells
20 votes -
Meet the Finnish biotech startup bringing a long lost mycoprotein to your plate – proprietary single-cell fungus-based protein was originally developed by local paper industry
5 votes -
Enzymes open new path to universal donor blood
12 votes -
AI traces mysterious metastatic cancers to their source
4 votes -
US biotech executive sentenced to seven years in jail for COVID test fraud
18 votes -
23andMe’s fall from $6 billion to nearly $0
25 votes -
DNA from stone age chewing gum sheds light on diet and disease in Scandinavia's ancient hunter-gatherers
11 votes -
Embracing idiosyncrasies over optimization: The path to innovation in biotechnological design
3 votes -
What am I thankful for this year? Amazing scientific discoveries.
19 votes -
Blood Music (1983)
7 votes -
New vaccine technology could protect from future viruses and variants
The vaccine antigen technology, developed by the University of Cambridge and spin-out DIOSynVax in early 2020, provided protection against all known variants of SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes...
The vaccine antigen technology, developed by the University of Cambridge and spin-out DIOSynVax in early 2020, provided protection against all known variants of SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes COVID-19 – as well as other major coronaviruses, including those that caused the first SARS epidemic in 2002.
The studies in mice, rabbits and guinea pigs [...] found that the vaccine candidate provided a strong immune response against a range of coronaviruses by targeting the parts of the virus that are required for replication.
Professor Jonathan Heeney from Cambridge’s Department of Veterinary Medicine, who led the research, [said] “We wanted to come up with a vaccine that wouldn’t only protect against SARS-CoV-2, but all its relatives.”
18 votes -
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
26 votes -
Folks in the biotech industry, what do you do and what is it like?
I've been doing a postdoc in molecular biology in academia for a little while now, and getting ready to take next step. I'm looking into industry careers, but it's difficult to know what they...
I've been doing a postdoc in molecular biology in academia for a little while now, and getting ready to take next step. I'm looking into industry careers, but it's difficult to know what they entail since we don't often get exposed to them.
If you or someone you know works in biotech, I'd love to hear about it.
How did you get into it? What do you enjoy or not enjoy? Where do you see the industry heading? What are some of the positions like?
15 votes -
Pacemakers, other implants, made of jelly
3 votes -
Scientists develop new birth control for female cats—no surgery necessary
12 votes -
How is AI impacting science?
4 votes -
MIT’s vaccine printer: The game-changer in vaccine distribution
3 votes -
One-hour operation could cure prostate cancer by destroying tumours with electric currents
11 votes -
The CIA just invested in woolly mammoth resurrection technology
8 votes -
How mushrooms are turned into bacon and styrofoam | World Wide Waste
10 votes -
The weed influencer and the scientist feuding over why some stoners incessantly puke
10 votes -
What's next for AlphaFold and the AI protein-folding revolution
11 votes -
Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes found guilty
26 votes -
Henrietta Lacks estate sues company using her ‘stolen’ cells
12 votes -
First patients to get CRISPR gene-editing treatment continue to thrive
21 votes -
Smartwatches monitor your health: An overview of what you get for the money
5 votes -
Gene therapy, absolutely and for real
4 votes -
Nobel Prize in chemistry goes to discovery of ‘genetic scissors’ called CRISPR/Cas9 by Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A. Doudna
13 votes -
Euronews travelled to Iceland to see how researchers are hunting down viruses – and exploring their potential uses as part of a project called Virus-X
4 votes -
Smartphone cameras can now detect diabetes with 80% accuracy
5 votes -
A year on, first patient to get gene editing for sickle cell disease is thriving
8 votes -
British farmers need all the help science can offer. Time to allow gene editing
12 votes -
CRISPR gene editing may help scale up coronavirus testing
3 votes -
Biotechs are battling to make the first good blood test for Covid-19
4 votes -
Hacking diabetes - A network of amateur programmers is transforming the illness with a DIY app
6 votes -
Giant phages have been found in French lakes, baboons from Kenya, and the human mouth
10 votes -
China convicts three researchers involved in gene-edited babies
11 votes -
China’s CRISPR babies: Read exclusive excerpts from the unseen original research
16 votes -
Taking the sting out: Australian gene editing is crossing the pain threshold
4 votes -
Researchers eliminated HIV from the genomes of living animals, for the first time
10 votes -
Researchers say they’re closer to finding cure for HIV after using CRISPR technology to eliminate disease in live mice for the first time
9 votes -
Data bleeding everywhere: A story of period trackers
11 votes -
When a treatment costs $450,000 or more, it had better work
8 votes