Gene Therapy’s Road to Redemption

Gene Therapy’s Road to Redemption

Pediatrics Nationwide magazine

Fifteen years ago, gene therapy suffered a highly visible fatality, leaving the field in shambles. Now, one team’s efforts at gene therapy for muscular dystrophy suggest the field may finally be on track to deliver on its initial promise.

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Anti-Alzheimer’s gene may have led to the rise of grandparents

Anti-Alzheimer’s gene may have led to the rise of grandparents

Science magazine

Evolutionarily speaking, we are born to make babies. Our bodies—and brains—don’t fall apart until we come to the end of our child-bearing years. So why are grandmothers, who don’t reproduce and who contribute little to food production, still around and still mentally sound?

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Biological Sciences

The “Y” Files

The “Y” Files

Paradigm magazine

The Y chromosome has been called the Rodney Dangerfield of the genomic world. New studies suggest it’s time to give the chromosome a little respect.

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When the bee stings

When the bee stings

HHMI Bulletin

A new study suggests large protein complexes called inflammasomes play a role a key role in the body’s response to venom from bee stings.

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Neurology & Neuroscience

Gene Therapy’s Road to Redemption

Gene Therapy’s Road to Redemption

Pediatrics Nationwide magazine

Fifteen years ago, gene therapy suffered a highly visible fatality, leaving the field in shambles. Now, one team’s efforts at gene therapy for muscular dystrophy suggest the field may finally be on track to deliver on its initial promise.

read more
Angry Brains

Angry Brains

Sarah Lawrence Magazine

People fight because of how they feel, whether angry, afraid, or threatened. Can understanding what’s happening in our brains help us control destructive emotions?

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Anti-Alzheimer’s gene may have led to the rise of grandparents

Anti-Alzheimer’s gene may have led to the rise of grandparents

Science magazine

Evolutionarily speaking, we are born to make babies. Our bodies—and brains—don’t fall apart until we come to the end of our child-bearing years. So why are grandmothers, who don’t reproduce and who contribute little to food production, still around and still mentally sound?

read more

Social Sciences

Angry Brains

Angry Brains

Sarah Lawrence Magazine

People fight because of how they feel, whether angry, afraid, or threatened. Can understanding what’s happening in our brains help us control destructive emotions?

read more

Genetics

Gene Therapy’s Road to Redemption

Gene Therapy’s Road to Redemption

Pediatrics Nationwide magazine

Fifteen years ago, gene therapy suffered a highly visible fatality, leaving the field in shambles. Now, one team’s efforts at gene therapy for muscular dystrophy suggest the field may finally be on track to deliver on its initial promise.

read more
Researchers Identify Genetic Mutation Linked to Congenital Heart Disease

Researchers Identify Genetic Mutation Linked to Congenital Heart Disease

Nationwide Children’s Hospital

A mutation in a gene crucial to normal heart development could play a role in some types of congenital heart disease—the most common birth defect in the U.S. The finding could help narrow the search for genes that contribute to this defect, which affects as many as 40,000 newborns a year.

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A knowledge gap

A knowledge gap

Pediatrics Nationwide magazine

Many pediatricians don’t feel competent to treat patients with genetic disorders, according to a new study that raises questions about how to better prepare physicians for these cases.

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Environmental Sciences

Breeding Nemo, Maine lab flourishes

Breeding Nemo, Maine lab flourishes

Boston Globe

Soren Hansen’s first marine lab was in the closet of an apartment in Orono, Maine. Years later, his company, Sea & Reef, was one of only a few whose tropical saltwater fish are grown from eggs produced in captivity.

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Crowning Glory

Crowning Glory

Compass Magazine

Once the keystone species–that upon which all the others depend–in the largest single-tree-dominated ecosystem in the United States, longleaf pine now occupies just under 3 million acres, less than 5 percent of its original territory.

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Marine Biology

Breeding Nemo, Maine lab flourishes

Breeding Nemo, Maine lab flourishes

Boston Globe

Soren Hansen’s first marine lab was in the closet of an apartment in Orono, Maine. Years later, his company, Sea & Reef, was one of only a few whose tropical saltwater fish are grown from eggs produced in captivity.

read more
This Shrimp’s Got Rhythm

This Shrimp’s Got Rhythm

Science magazine

Yellow-beaked cleaner shrimp may not sing for their supper, but they’ll dance to get a meal, a new study suggests. The small crustaceans, which dine on parasites that infest large, predatory fish, use the dance to attract customers.

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General Science News

Canadian Universities Pick 19 Good Men

Canadian Universities Pick 19 Good Men

Science magazine

When the Canadian government created a $200 million pot to attract up to 20 of the world’s best researchers in four target areas, university administrators had no trouble finding 36 stars that they wanted to hire. Diversity was another matter, however.

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Drivers of Discovery

Drivers of Discovery

Paradigm magazine

A national report says postdoctoral researchers are “indispensable” to the advancement of science, a fact often overlooked by institutions and funding agencies. Now, postdocs are pushing for change. And people are listening.

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