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Genetic Archaeology News Archives Page 4

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Researchers study viruses at deep-sea vents (12/24/2007)

Researchers study viruses at deep-sea ventsA University of Delaware research team has received a $1.2 million National Science Foundation grant to study one of the least appreciated of all life forms--viruses. ...> Full Article


Researchers Solve First Structure of a Key to Intact DNA Inheritance (12/23/2007)

Researchers have solved the structure of a DNA-protein complex that is crucial in the spread of antibiotic resistance among bacteria. Knowing this structure also provides fundamental insight into how cells successfully divide into two new cells with intact DNA. ...> Full Article


Gene neighbors may have taken turns battling retroviruses (12/22/2007)

A cluster of antiviral genes in humans has likely battled retroviral invasions for millions of years. New research by Sara Sawyer, Ph.D., a postdoctoral research fellow in the Basic Sciences Division at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, now finds that in addition to the previously identified TRIM5 gene that can defend against retroviruses like HIV, a related gene right next door, called TRIM22, may have participated in antiviral defense. ...> Full Article


International Research Collaboration Narrows Focus on Genetic Cause of Kawasaki Disease (12/21/2007)

Investigators Say Findings May Impact Treatment of Additional Diseases ...> Full Article


Losses Of Long-established Genes Contribute To Human Evolution (12/21/2007)

Losses Of Long-established Genes Contribute To Human EvolutionWhile it is well understood that the evolution of new genes leads to adaptations that help species survive, gene loss may also afford a selective advantage. A group of scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz led by biomolecular engineering professor David Haussler has investigated this less-studied idea, carrying out the first systematic computational analysis to identify long-established genes that have been lost across millions of years of evolution leading to the human species. ...> Full Article


Evolution With A Restricted Number Of Genes (12/20/2007)

The development of higher forms of life would appear to have been influenced by RNA polymerase II. This enzyme transcribes the information coded by genes from DNA into messenger-RNA (mRNA), which in turn is the basis for the production of proteins. RNA polymerase II is highly conserved through evolution, with many of its structural characteristics being conserved between bacteria and humans. ...> Full Article


Discovery Points to Treatment Approach for Fragile X Syndrome (12/20/2007)

New research has found that many of the symptoms of fragile X syndrome, the most common cause of inherited mental retardation, can be eliminated in mice by reducing the expression of a single gene in the brain. The study suggests that the gene is a prime target for drugs to alleviate symptoms of the disorder, for which there is currently no specific treatment. ...> Full Article


Frozen hair holds secrets of Yellowstone grizzlies (12/19/2007)

Frozen hair holds secrets of Yellowstone grizzliesLocks of hair from more than 400 grizzly bears are stored at Montana State University, waiting to tell the tale of genetic diversity in the Yellowstone Ecosystem. ...> Full Article


Researchers discover second light-sensing system in human eye (12/18/2007)

Researchers discover second light-sensing system in human eyeFinding enhances understanding of circadian rhythms ...> Full Article


ArrayExpress database doubles in size to 100,000 hybridisations (12/17/2007)

ArrayExpress, the publicly available database of transcriptomics data at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory's European Bioinformatics Institute [EMBL-EBI], has doubled in size in 2007, reaching the 100,000-hybridisation milestone. The database now holds snapshots of gene expression [identifying which genes are specifically expressed in a particular tissue or in response to a drug, for example] for more than 180 species under thousands of experimental conditions. ...> Full Article


Losses of long-established genes contributed to human evolution, scientists find (12/17/2007)

Losses of long-established genes contributed to human evolution, scientists findThe evolution of new genes is not the only way for a species to change. The loss of genes may also lead to adaptations that help species survive, but this idea has not been well studied. Now, scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, have carried out the first systematic computational analysis to identify long-established genes that were lost during the millions of years of evolution leading to the human species. Their findings appear in the December 14 issue of PLoS Computational Biology. ...> Full Article


Researchers spearhead key genome initiative (12/16/2007)

Researchers spearhead key genome initiativeThe complete collection of genes - the genome - of a moss has been sequenced, providing scientists an important evolutionary link between single-celled algae and flowering plants. ...> Full Article


Genetic switch for circadian rhythms discovered (12/16/2007)

University of California, Irvine researchers have identified the chemical switch that triggers the genetic mechanism regulating our internal body clock. ...> Full Article


Ice Ages And Rivers May Have Affected Gorilla Diversification (12/15/2007)

Ice Ages And Rivers May Have Affected Gorilla DiversificationGeography and historical climate change may have both played a major role in gorilla evolutionary diversification, according to a new genetic study by Cardiff University and the University of New Orleans. ...> Full Article


In Fruit Flies, Homosexuality Is Biological But Not Hard-Wired (12/15/2007)

In Fruit Flies, Homosexuality Is Biological But Not Hard-WiredWhile the biological basis for homosexuality remains a mystery, a team of neurobiologists reports they may have closed in on an answer -- by a nose. ...> Full Article


Same Genetic Machinery Generates Skin Color Evolution in Fish and Humans (12/14/2007)

Same Genetic Machinery Generates Skin Color Evolution in Fish and HumansWhen humans began to migrate out of Africa about 100,000 years ago, their skin color gradually changed to adapt to their new environments. And when the last Ice Age ended about 10,000 years ago, marine ancestors of ocean-dwelling stickleback fish experienced dramatic changes in skin coloring as they colonized newly formed lakes and streams. New research shows that despite the vast evolutionary gulf between humans and the three-spined stickleback fish, the two species have adopted a common genetic strategy to acquire the skin pigmentation that would help each species thrive in their new environments. ...> Full Article


Genome study places modern humans in the evolutionary fast lane (12/14/2007)

Genome study places modern humans in the evolutionary fast laneCountering a common theory that human evolution has slowed to a crawl or even stopped in modern humans, a new study examining data from an international genomics project describes the past 40,000 years as a time of supercharged evolutionary change, driven by exponential population growth and cultural shifts. ...> Full Article


More 'functional' dna in genome than previously thought (12/13/2007)

Surrounding the small islands of genes within the human genome is a vast sea of mysterious DNA. While most of this non-coding DNA is junk, some of it is used to help genes turn on and off. As reported online this week in Genome Research, Hopkins researchers have now found that this latter portion, which is known as regulatory DNA and contributes to inherited diseases like Parkinson's or mental disorders, may be more abundant than we realize. ...> Full Article


New Lab Method Detects DNA Damage in the Genome (12/13/2007)

In laboratory experiments using budding yeast, the same type used in baking and brewing, scientists at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, developed a new approach to determine the location of unrepaired breaks in DNA. This new approach should better inform research as unrepaired DNA damage often underlies the development of cancer. The research findings appear in the December, 2007, issue of PloS Biology. ...> Full Article


Present-day Species Of Piranha Resulted From Marine Incursion Into Amazon Basin (12/12/2007)

Present-day Species Of Piranha Resulted From Marine Incursion Into Amazon BasinPiranhas inhabit exclusively the fresh waters of South America. Their geographical distribution extends from the Orinoco River basin (Venezuela) to the North, down to that of the Paraná (Argentina) to the South. Over this whole area, which also embraces the entire Amazon Basin, biologists have recorded 28 carnivorous species of these fish (2). In spite of the evolutionary success of this subfamily of fish, the mechanisms that generated the species richness of this group are still insufficiently known. ...> Full Article


Are Humans Evolving Faster? (12/12/2007)

Researchers discovered genetic evidence that human evolution is speeding up - and has not halted or proceeded at a constant rate, as had been thought - indicating that humans on different continents are becoming increasingly different. ...> Full Article


Epigenetic marks a clue to multiple functions of the brain (12/9/2007)

A team of scientists has catalogued chemical tags attached to more than 800 genes from 76 human brain samples and collected the first evidence of how these special, inherited epigenetic "marks" might account for different brain functions. The results appear in the December issue of The American Journal of Human Genetics. ...> Full Article


Plants see the light to help beat the big freeze (12/8/2007)

Light quality signals enhance plant freezing tolerance ...> Full Article


Team discovers bacterial surprise (12/7/2007)

A DNA shift never before seen in nature ...> Full Article


Keeping an eye on evolution (12/6/2007)

Keeping an eye on evolutionUniversity of Queensland research has found the 'missing link' in the evolution of the eye. ...> Full Article


New Hypothesis For Origin of Life Proposed (12/5/2007)

New Hypothesis For Origin of Life ProposedLife may have begun in the protected spaces inside of layers of the mineral mica, in ancient oceans, according to a new hypothesis. ...> Full Article


Scientists Map Imprinted Genes in Human Genome (12/4/2007)

Scientists at Duke University have created the first map of imprinted genes throughout the human genome, and they say a modern-day Rosetta stone – a form of artificial intelligence called machine learning – was the key to their success. ...> Full Article


Human gene count tumbles again (12/4/2007)

New analysis reveals several thousand genes to be spurious, leads to gene count revision ...> Full Article


Mutant sperm guide clinicians to new diseases (12/3/2007)

Research published today in Nature Genetics shows that some rearrangements of the human genome occur more frequently than previously thought. The work is likely to lead to new identification of genes involved in disease and to improve diagnosis of genomic disease. ...> Full Article


Genetic Underpinnings of Wood Digestion by Termite Gut Microbes Revealed (12/3/2007)

Genetic Underpinnings of Wood Digestion by Termite Gut Microbes RevealedWhen termites are chewing on your home, your immediate thought probably isn't "I wonder how they digest that stuff?" But biologists have been gnawing on the question for more than a century. The key is not just the termite, but what lives in its gut. A multitude of genes from the microbes populating the hindgut of a termite have been sequenced and analyzed, and the findings reported today in the journal Nature. ...> Full Article


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