Sclerosis, salamanders and jumping genes
21 June, 2013 | Claire Scott |
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Silencing sclerosis: the first promising results in humans of genetic therapy for neurological diseases. https://t.co/DhNZuwbXjd
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 18, 2013
Jumping genes! Are transposable elements involved in ageing and neurodegeneration? https://t.co/hskc37y6RH
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 17, 2013
Macrophages are key to limb regrowth in salamanders could this unlock regenerative abilities in mammals? https://t.co/8wZSDGYzIf
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 20, 2013
And from elsewhere on Twitter…
The perfect cake for the cell biologist in your life https://t.co/irOQg2PsWn ht @RockefellerUniv
— Richard Sever (@cshperspectives) June 19, 2013
If you're interested in honey bees or you like nature films, find a way to see "More Than Honey." https://t.co/03QOx0zXw6 It's really amazing
— Ferris Jabr (@ferrisjabr) June 19, 2013
Congratulations @nerdychristie on attaining the "I've eaten my studies species" badge. Welcome to the club. https://t.co/vZirP7vXtL
— Jason G. Goldman (@jgold85) June 19, 2013
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