In the quiet woods of West Bengal and the lush countryside of Kerala, a lethal pathogen is once again testing the limits of ...
Discover how a newly developed platform technology from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill can enhance RNAi ...
The plant, announced in May 2025, was slated to open in the first quarter of this year, bringing 170 jobs to Plano’s Legacy ...
Hidden inside the human body, scientists have uncovered thousands of bizarre RNA loops unlike anything in biology. These ...
A study finds that brief immune stress in male mice can leave lasting metabolic and behavioral effects in offspring through ...
RNA Drugs: presented yesterday in Naples, at the research area of Naples of the CNR, in via Pietro Castellino, the results of the first three years of research conducted within the Neapolitan network ...
If you read a book in 2025—just one book—you belong to an endangered species. Like honeybees and red wolves, the population of American readers, Lector americanus, has been declining for decades. The ...
The Lede Reporting and commentary on what you need to know today. This way of perceiving social reality—and particularly a person’s reading life—may seem inane, even deranged. But performative reading ...
Nearly a year ago, when Education Week hosted an online conference about adolescent literacy across the content areas, we got a lot of interested and enthusiastic responses from participants. But we ...
In 2010, tusk hunters scouring a riverbank near Siberia’s Arctic coast discovered the mummy of a juvenile mammoth. The animal, nicknamed “Yuka” after the nearby village of Yukagir, had been frozen for ...
WASHINGTON, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Scientists have recovered the oldest-known RNA, a molecule necessary for most biological functions, from a woolly mammoth that inhabited Siberia about 39,000 years ago, ...
Some 39,000 years ago, a woolly mammoth died in present-day Siberia, destined to be blanketed by ice and permafrost that would end up preserving its body — even down to the hair and muscle. Now, that ...