For more than a decade, scientists have been aware of chromothripsis — the process in which a single chromosome breaks into pieces and is rearranged in random order, enabling cancer cells to evolve ...
Agrobacterium tumefaciens magnified 15,000 times in an image captured earlier this year with a scanning electron microscope at Iowa State University's Roy J. Carver High Resolution Microscopy Facility ...
In a major leap forward for genetic and biomedical research, two scientists at the University of Missouri have developed a powerful new artificial intelligence tool that can predict the 3D shape of ...
Every living being possesses a particular number of chromosome pairs that it inherited from both parents. In human beings, for example, there are 23 pairs, i.e., 46 chromosomes altogether, tomatoes ...