Death genes, painkillers and junk DNA
26 April, 2013 | Samuel Winthrop |
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Is junk DNA bunk? Yet another critique of ENCODE ow.ly/kelsG (here’s another ow.ly/jxRTy).
— F1000Prime (@F1000) April 23, 2013
Old drug, new tricks. A study on influenza protein identifies a common painkiller as a potential antiviral. – ow.ly/kenqj
— F1000Prime (@F1000) April 23, 2013
Happily, there is no ‘death gene’: mortality is too complex to map according to this genome-wide study. ow.ly/k0tcg
— F1000Prime (@F1000) April 19, 2013
Whilst on the rest of Twitter…
My brain-controlling parasite post comes from a pre-print paper that @mbeisen then blogged about. Yay, open science. phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/04/26/min…
— Ed Yong(@edyong209) April 26, 2013
The microbes you inhale on the New York City subway: The microbial population in the air of the New York City … bit.ly/12tlSVc
— MicrobeWorld (@MicrobeWorld) April 26, 2013
Image of the Day: An HIV-infected dendritic cell. #IOD bit.ly/17iTN54 twitter.com/TheScientistLL…
— The Scientist (@TheScientistLLC) April 24, 2013
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