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The Living Dinosaur

This post was originally published in Harvard Magazine, the alumni magazine of Harvard University. This week’s guest blogger is historian Jill Jonnes, author of Eiffel’s Tower, Conquering Gotham, and...

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Best of Nature Network, nature.com blogs and Scitable: 24 – 30 March

DNA Origami Paige Brown reveals in her latest post that origami has gone molecular! She explains that nano-scale DNA origami can be used to make super-cool three-dimensional shapes out of...

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Missing biologist surfaces, reunites with family

Margaret “Margie” Profet has returned. In Psychology Today this month, journalist Mike Martin tells the haunting tale of a promising young evolutionary biologist who vanished without a trace. Profet...

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Highlights from the Keystone Symposium on Stem Cells & Reprogramming

View from the Resort at Squaw Creek. Not a bad place for a conference!Brooke LaFlamme I recently attended the joint Keystone Symposium “Stem Cells & Reprogramming” and “Engineering Cell Fate &...

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Enhancing our knowledge of regulatory evolution

Fly illustrations from The University of Texas Publication No. 4313: April 1, 1943 and The University of Texas Publication No. 4445: December 1, 1944 A paper published online this week in Nature...

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Uncovering the secrets of the orchid

It seems that every day, another species of plant or animal is being sequenced. How do scientists choose which species should have its genome sequenced? For some, such as African rice, the main...

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On the history of pigs

Agricultural Research Service via Wikipedia Understanding the genomic changes that occurred during the domestication of animals and plants by humans is important on many levels. Such insights can...

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Science communication: Life’s a pitch

Or: How to come out as a scientist to the public, your friends and family, when the latter paid for your degree and the former are paying for your current research, and all are slightly against the...

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Pollinators and Petunias

Sheehan et al., Nature Genetics, 2015 Pollinators are attracted to flowers based on certain characteristics, including color, scent and morphology. Evolutionary changes in these traits correlate with...

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Ancient regulatory logic

Yao et al. found that certain brain enhancers were functionally conserved between mice (left) and acorn worm (right), despite very limited sequence conservation. Douglas Epstein A study published this...

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Highlighting genomes for DNA Day 2016

October 2015 cover “Histone butterflies” by Luisa Lente. Inspired by Salvador Dalí. Today is national DNA day, celebrating the completion of the Human Genome Project in 2003 and the publication of the...

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April issue cover: What’s going on here?

Tlalcacahuatl gold by Erin Dewalt This month’s cover image is a visual tribute to the peanut and its importance to both the ancient civilizations of the Americas and modern agriculture. The genome...

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The Colorful Carrot Genome

Iorizzo et al. Nature Genetics, 2016 A high-quality assembly of the carrot (Daucus carota) genome is reported this week in Nature Genetics. Carrot is an important crop due to its high content of...

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Woolly mammoth hemoglobin brought to life: From the archives (2010)

Cave painting: Mammouth gravé de la grotte des Combarelles (Dordogne, France) As part of the ongoing celebration of the last 25 years of Nature Genetics, the editors are each choosing a few papers from...

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Five rules for starting up in synthetic biology

Building a synthetic biology startup is tough – but stay the course and it’ll be the most rewarding struggle of your life, says James Field. Since the advent of life 3.6 billion years ago, the survival...

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Uncovering the secrets of the orchid

It seems that every day, another species of plant or animal is being sequenced. How do scientists choose which species should have its genome sequenced? For some, such as African rice, the main...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

On the history of pigs

Agricultural Research Service via Wikipedia Understanding the genomic changes that occurred during the domestication of animals and plants by humans is important on many levels. Such insights can...

View Article


Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Science communication: Life’s a pitch

Or: How to come out as a scientist to the public, your friends and family, when the latter paid for your degree and the former are paying for your current research, and all are slightly against the...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Pollinators and Petunias

Sheehan et al., Nature Genetics, 2015 Pollinators are attracted to flowers based on certain characteristics, including color, scent and morphology. Evolutionary changes in these traits correlate with...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Ancient regulatory logic

Yao et al. found that certain brain enhancers were functionally conserved between mice (left) and acorn worm (right), despite very limited sequence conservation. Douglas Epstein A study published this...

View Article
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