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Breeding for bigger cattle may come with hidden fertility trade-offs

A University of Queensland analysis of genetic data from northern Australian cattle has identified key regions of the genome that influence traits like fertility, growth and body condition, sometimes all at the same time. ...

A new protein timeline explains plasma membrane repair

In the evolutionary history of life, the ability of a cell to separate its inner world from the external environment was an important turning point. The so-called plasma membrane lets cells control what gets in and out and ...

Why averages fail for bacteria in the open ocean

How can bacteria that forage on organic particles survive in vast ocean regions where such particles are extremely sparse? A new study by researchers from ETH Zurich and Queen Mary University of London shows that variability ...

Cornwall ocean study highlights value of low-cost eDNA tests

Environmental DNA (eDNA) tests can identify genetic material left by organisms in the environment, such as cells and excrement, but surveys of ocean wildlife can be difficult and expensive, and standard eDNA tests are also ...

How a protein pair ensures that faulty mRNA is destroyed

Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is one of the most important processes in our cells to ensure that no faulty or incomplete proteins are produced. Scientists have now identified a central mechanism behind this control system.

A new clue to how the body detects physical force

Every time we feel a gentle tap on the skin, specialized nerve cells convert that physical force into an electrical signal the brain can interpret as touch. While scientists have long known that a protein called PIEZO2 acts ...

A new 'molecular switch' for inborn immunity identified

Innate immune sensors—known as pattern recognition receptors (PRRs)—detect specific molecular components of bacterial or viral intruders. The PRRs forward the signals which results in the production of interferons, which ...

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Cell & Microbiology
Fluorescent imaging reveals how a global parasite develops, opening new paths for drug treatment
Molecular & Computational biology
This odd little plant could help turbocharge crop yields
Plants & Animals
Plant cell structure could hold key to cancer therapies and improved crops
Biotechnology
Thermogenetics: How proteins are controllable by heat
Ecology
Protecting wildlife from genetic collapse with newly identified 'early warning signals'
Evolution
Scientists clock a driving factor in the evolution of error correction
Evolution
Flipped chromosomal segments drive natural selection, Atlantic silversides study shows
Biotechnology
Pond-dwelling microalga exposes a parallel track for RNA processing
Ecology
Whole-genome study of koalas shows genetic diversity alone can misread extinction risk
Ecology
Piecing together parasitic plant pathways
Ecology
New software for biodiversity research enables comprehensive quantification of ecological stability
Molecular & Computational biology
Research sheds light on food safety risks in California's Central Coast produce
Cell & Microbiology
How cells work together: The mathematics behind biological shapes
Biotechnology
With Evo 2, AI can model and design the genetic code for all domains of life
Cell & Microbiology
Understanding how cells take up and use isolated mitochondria to restore energy function
Biotechnology
Black soldier fly larvae show promise for safe organic waste removal
Cell & Microbiology
Simulation makes it possible to study movements of cell's largest protein complexes without supercomputers
Cell & Microbiology
Influenza's molecular theft caught in action—how the virus steals the cap of host RNA in order to replicate
Cell & Microbiology
Just three molecules can launch gene-silencing condensates in stem cells
Molecular & Computational biology
Tomato and pepper production faces emerging threats

Other news

Plants & Animals
Japanese scientists discover how falling cats almost always make perfect landings
Planetary Sciences
New exoplanet survey method finds high rates of closely orbiting planets
Earth Sciences
Glacial lakes in Alaska are expanding rapidly and could quadruple in size
General Physics
Precisely measuring quantum signals in large spin ensembles
Analytical Chemistry
Scientists harness quantum tunneling to boost heavy water production efficiency
Astronomy
NASA finds extreme star collision in unlikely spot
Plants & Animals
Europe's buzzards are losing their color diversity, citizen science reveals
Optics & Photonics
3D-printed photonic lanterns combine up to 37 multimode lasers into one fiber
Condensed Matter
Scientists control 'free-flowing' electric currents with light
Earth Sciences
Soil health index finds restored mangroves can near full function
Biotechnology
One gene makes the difference: Breeding winter-hardy faba beans
Archaeology
First absolute dating of Paleolithic paintings in the Dordogne
Planetary Sciences
A new model defines an upper limit to planetary radiation belt intensity
Plants & Animals
Gnaw-y by nature: Researchers discover neural circuit that rewards gnawing behavior in rodents
Environment
Where wells run deep, biodiversity runs thin
Mathematics
Student serves up fresh solutions to the pancake problem
Plants & Animals
Could ultrasound help save hedgehogs?
Ecology
Ancient stone jars shows how tree cover shapes freshwater ecosystems over millennia
Optics & Photonics
Ultrafast computing: Light-driven logic tops 10 terahertz in WS₂
Biochemistry
How boron helps to produce key proteins for new cancer therapies

Using AI to keep CRISPR technology in-check

Last year, a ten-month-old baby in the US was the first person in the world to have their rare genetic disease effectively cured through the use of CRISPR gene editing technology. But the rollout of CRISPR across a wide range ...

How gut bacteria control immune responses

Bacteria in the human gut can directly deliver proteins into human cells, actively shaping immune responses. A consortium led by researchers at Helmholtz Munich, with participation from Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU), ...

AI tool Helixer identifies genes in newly sequenced organisms

Researchers at Forschungszentrum Jülich and Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf have developed a tool that could significantly transform genome research: Helixer identifies genes directly from DNA sequences—without laboratory ...