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Decoded genome paves way for better watermelons
29-Nov-2012 - Sweeter and more disease-resistant watermelons just may be on their way, thanks to an international consortium of more than 60 scientists that has just published the genome sequence of watermelon (Citrullus lanatus). Such information could dramatically accelerate breeding to produce more ...
29-Aug-2012 - Although scientists sequenced the entire human genome more than 10 years ago, much work remains to understand what proteins all those genes code for.Now, a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences describes a new approach that allows researchers to decode the genome ...
20-Feb-2012 - A team of international researchers is working to tackle the global problem of plant viral diseases that are spread by insects, thanks to close to $1 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.The team, headed by Stewart Gray, a U.S. Department of ...
31-Jan-2012 - Two Cornell professors will combine their inventions to develop a handheld pathogen detector that will give health care workers in the developing world speedy results to identify in the field such pathogens as tuberculosis, chlamydia, gonorrhea and HIV.Using synthetic DNA, Dan Luo, professor of ...
New method connects proteins with mutations that lead to genetic disease
20-Jan-2012 - For the first time, a new computational method allows researchers to identify which specific molecular mechanisms are altered by genetic mutations in proteins that lead to disease. And they can apply this method to any genetic disease.Why is this important? Although researchers have produced long ...
13-Dec-2011 - A quick, inexpensive and highly sensitive test that identifies disease markers or other molecules in low-concentration solutions could be the result of a Cornell-developed nanomechanical biosensor, which could potentially help with early stage disease detection.The biosensor, based on a photonic ...
03-Nov-2011 - Studying chemical modifications in the chromosomes of cells is akin to searching for changes in coiled spaghetti. Scientists at Cornell have figured out how to stretch out tangled strands of DNA from chromosomes, line them up and tag them to reflect different levels of modification -- which could ...
28-Oct-2011 - With Salmonella-tainted ground turkey sickening more than 100 people and Listeria-contaminated cantaloupes killing 15 this year, the ability to detect outbreaks of food-borne illness and determine their sources has become a top public health priority.A new approach, reported in the journal ...
22-Sep-2011 - Cornell researchers have developed new statistical methods based on the complete genome sequences of people alive today to shed light on events at the dawn of human history.They applied their methods to the genomes of individuals of East Asian, European, and western and southern African descent. ...
02-Sep-2011 - During such mass food-poisoning outbreaks as the recent contamination of ground turkey, speedy identification of the bacteria involved can save lives and reduce illness. New research co-authored by a Cornell food scientist will accelerate the process of identifying strains of salmonella bacteria ...
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