Science
Scientists use DNA origami to monitor CRISPR gene targeting – Science Codex

ROCKVILLE, MD – The remarkable genetic scissors called CRISPR/Cas9, the discovery that won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, sometimes cut in places that they are not designed to target. Though CRISPR has completely changed the pace of basic research by allowing scientists to quickly edit genetic sequences, it works so fast that it is hard for scientists to see what sometimes goes wrong and figure out how to improve it. Julene Madariaga Marcos, a Humboldt postdoctoral fellow, and colleagues in…
-
General24 hours ago
Federal Labor makes $100m Canberra convention centre funding pledge for planning, new aquatic centre
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Homicide investigation launched into stabbing death of 39-year-old Brisbane man at Bowen Hills apartment
-
General21 hours ago
Donald Trump and the ghost of Al Capone • Inside Story
-
General14 hours ago
French far-right supporters rally against Le Pen conviction in Paris