Sweet genes, sword & shield, and active Parkinsons: the F1000 Twitter round up
15 May, 2015 | Adie Chan |
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Have a great weekend!
Sweet genes are made of this: genome analysis of the sweet potato shows its origin as a naturally transgenic crop. https://t.co/zWREcolnKZ
— F1000 (@F1000) May 13, 2015
With sword and shield: how indigenous gut microbiota regulate biosynthesis of serotonin, the intestinal defender. https://t.co/ShaQrDqIPl
— F1000 (@F1000) May 13, 2015
Being active as a preventative? A medium level of physical activity reduces risk of developing Parkinson's disease. https://t.co/G8neON5I6q
— F1000 (@F1000) May 14, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
She helped make a monumental discovery in biology. Now she's fighting to control it https://t.co/effON5G6Cc pic.twitter.com/55rNIP143x
— NYT Science (@NYTScience) May 11, 2015
OK, wow. Researchers have discovered a 'warm-blooded' fish. This is totally cool! https://t.co/yullrYZEgl
— Jon Tennant (@Protohedgehog) May 15, 2015
I have been trying the beta version of the new @F1000 Workspace collaborative writing tool and it is great!! https://t.co/ZI4J13MgXn
— Andrew Chalmers (@Chalmers_AD) May 13, 2015
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