Sex, influenza and crystallography
24 October, 2014 | Claire Scott |
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The origins of sex: how a single mating locus gene in algae enabled organisms to develop as males or females. https://t.co/pMo41XhNyv
— F1000 (@F1000) October 21, 2014
Infectious axis of evil: how influenza virus makes patients more susceptible to co-infection with S. pneumoniae. https://t.co/KLbjgbTIRV
— F1000 (@F1000) October 21, 2014
Crystal clear: summarizing the work of X-ray crystallographers to archive important raw crystallographic data. https://t.co/L9Ig7Kf4os
— F1000 (@F1000) October 22, 2014
And elsewhere on Twitter…
“Everywhere you point this thing, you're going to learn something new.”
— Eric Betzig
https://t.co/isZqMGH0Av
— Miëtek Bak (@mietek) October 24, 2014
Rapid evolution! Native lizard evolved larger toepads in 20 gens after invasion by congener @JLosos @sciencemagazine https://t.co/QXMIYvmXJy
— Corrie Moreau (@CorrieMoreau) October 24, 2014
Where are the women in science? Right here! lovely article by Suzi Gage @soozaphone Media Woman promoting STEM… https://t.co/GIgkxeqAWF
— Media Woman (@MediaWomanUK) October 24, 2014
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