Articles written for the GLP list the source as Genes and Science. All other articles were written for the sources noted with excerpts provided by the GLP.

Older coronavirus victims 350 percent likelier to experience symptoms than 10-19 year olds

The COVID-19 pandemic has shown a markedly low proportion of cases among children. Age disparities in observed cases could be ...

Another pandemic coming? Expanding land use boosts exposure to diverse zoonotic diseases, study finds

Rory Gibb&nbsp|&nbsp
Land use change—for example, the conversion of natural habitats to agricultural or urban ecosystems—is widely recognized to influence the risk ...

When CRISPR gene editing falls short: ‘Base editing’ might treat disorders on the maternal line in mitochondrial DNA

Heidi Ledford&nbsp|&nbsp
[A] technique — which builds on a super-precise version of gene editing called base editing — could allow researchers to ...
fall armyworm mgmt

GMO insect-resistant Bt prevents cancer and saves farmers up to $167 million per year, study shows

David Hennessy, Felicia Wu, Jina Yu&nbsp|&nbsp
Previous field studies have reached no collective consensus on whether Bt corn, the most commonly planted transgenic crop worldwide, has ...

Infographic: Animal origins or lab leak? Tracing coronavirus back to the source

David Cyranoski&nbsp|&nbsp
Since the pandemic began, the question of where the coronavirus came from has been one of the biggest puzzles. It ...

Infographic: 8 ways we can defeat the coronavirus

Ewen Callaway&nbsp|&nbsp
More than 90 vaccines are being developed against SARS-CoV-2 by research teams in companies and universities across the world. Researchers ...

Genetic analysis unravels East Asia’s history, highlighting migration of early farmers

Ewen Callaway&nbsp|&nbsp
Ancient genomics is starting to unravel the history of East Asia. The first large-scale studies of ancient human genomes from ...

Anti-vaccine online movement targeting undecided groups in social media, spreading disinformation about safety and coronavirus containment efforts, study warns

Philip Ball&nbsp|&nbsp
As scientists work to create a vaccine against COVID-19, a small but fervent anti-vaccination movement is marshalling against it. Campaigners ...

‘A radical idea’: Could a single factor be responsible for all mental illnesses?

Michael Marshall&nbsp|&nbsp
What are the roots of mental illness? In the hope of finding an answer, scientists have piled up an enormous ...

Why isn’t there an ‘accelerated pathway’ for approving treatments during a pandemic?

John Hodgson&nbsp|&nbsp
Commercial biopharmaceutical discovery is a less than ideal vehicle for responding to an outbreak of a new viral pathogen spreading ...

Will genetically improved crops be enough to sustainably feed a booming global population?

A growing, increasingly affluent and urban human population is driving demand for more food grown in more-sustainable ways. ... Sustainable ...

Searching for coronavirus ‘antidote’ in the blood of former patients

Amy Maxmen&nbsp|&nbsp
Hospitals in New York City are gearing up to use the blood of people who have recovered from COVID-19 as ...

100 best-selling nutrition books give ‘puzzling’ advice, and few written by experts, study shows

Rebecca Marton&nbsp|&nbsp
Nutritional decisions may be important for health, and yet identifying trustworthy sources of advice can be difficult to achieve. Many ...

China will test African swine fever vaccine on 10,000–20,000 pigs to ensure it won’t spread virus

Smriti Mallapaty&nbsp|&nbsp
Researchers in China have developed an experimental vaccine that can protect pigs for life from a lethal virus that has ...

Viewpoint: To protect genetic privacy, it’s ‘crucial’ that we develop an international code of conduct

Fruzsina Molnár-Gábor, Mark Phillips&nbsp|&nbsp
Genomics researchers worldwide are increasingly dealing with vast data sets gathered by consortia spanning many countries. Most are unclear on ...
b eede cdb a e c e bf

‘Excitement is finally catching on’: Why RNA editing may be more promising than CRISPR

Sara Reardon&nbsp|&nbsp
CRISPR editing — at least as a therapeutic technique in people — has turned out to be more difficult than ...

GMO Golden Rice meets safety standards set by Philippines, Bangladesh, and Indonesia, assessment shows

Norman Oliva&nbsp|&nbsp
Vitamin A deficiency (VAD) persists as a major public health nutrition problem, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Severe ...

We can sustainably feed 3.4 billion people. Study shows 4 eco-friendly farming practices will help produce food for 10 billion

Dieter Gerten&nbsp|&nbsp
Global agriculture puts heavy pressure on planetary boundaries, posing the challenge to achieve future food security without compromising Earth system ...

Developing a ‘kill switch’ to make CRISPR gene editing more precise—and safer

Elie Dolgin&nbsp|&nbsp
[Microbiologists] stumbled onto tools now known as anti-CRISPRs. These proteins serve as the rocks to CRISPR’s molecular scissors. And soon, ...

Quest to understand sense of touch could lead to new treatments for chronic pain

Amber Dance&nbsp|&nbsp
If she wasn’t looking at her limbs, the girl didn’t seem to have any clue where they were. She lacked ...

‘Search and destroy’: Precision stem cell treatments could be safer against blood cancers

Heidi Ledford&nbsp|&nbsp
Scientists are experimenting with ways to selectively target the body’s blood-making cells for destruction. Early studies in animals and people ...

Post-Green Revolution study: Projected crop yields unable to feed the world by 2050, we need GMOs, gene editing and other ‘genetic strategies’

Julia Bailey-Serres&nbsp|&nbsp
The current trajectory for crop yields is insufficient to nourish the world’s population by 2050. Greater and more consistent crop ...

CRISPR immunizes rice, staple crop consumed by billions, against devastating bacterial infection

Genome editing has made one of the world’s most important crops resistant to a devastating bacterial infection. ... The researchers ...

Viewpoint: New study provides clear evidence of substantial insect biomass and biodiversity losses

William Kunin&nbsp|&nbsp
There are certain times in life .... when we think that we know something but the evidence is less than ...

‘De novo genes’: How natural selection creates new genes from nothing

Adam Levy&nbsp|&nbsp
In the depths of winter, water temperatures in the ice-covered Arctic Ocean can sink below zero. That’s cold enough to ...

Emerging field of ‘social genomics’ comes with ethical, societal risks: ‘Who’s going to benefit?’

David Adam&nbsp|&nbsp
By looking at the genomes of people living in former coal-mining areas, [geneticist Abdel Abdellaoui] has found genetic signatures associated ...

Researchers retract study questioning long-term health of China’s controversial CRISPR babies

Ewen Callaway&nbsp|&nbsp
A study that raised questions over the future health of the world’s first gene-edited babies has been retracted because of ...

Science journals should publish negative results to speed technological advances, CRISPR expert urges

Devang Mehta&nbsp|&nbsp
Near the end of April, my colleagues and I published an unusual scientific paper — one reporting a failed experiment ...