«The findings provide new insight into how cells faithfully transmit this organizational
information as embryos develop, and into what goes wrong when cellular development goes awry, thereby giving rise to abnormal cell development and diseases such as cancer,» says senior study investigator Danny Reinberg, PhD, professor of biochemistry and molecular pharmacology at NYU Langone and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
Not exact matches
But in recent decades, scientific advances — such
as the ability to manipulate genes and turn them on and off in developing
embryos — have provided us with a plethora of new
information, and insights into how organisms develop and change.
Genetic
information as defined by GINA, includes an individual's family medical history, the results of an individual's or family member's genetic tests, the fact that an individual or an individual's family member sought or received genetic services, and genetic
information of a fetus carried by an individual or an individual's family member or an
embryo lawfully held by an individual or family member receiving assistive reproductive services.»