REYKJAVIK, Iceland, 20 September 2017 — In
a major study published today, researchers at deCODE genetics use whole - genome data from 14,000 people from across the population of Iceland, including 1500 sets of parents and children, to provide the most detailed portrait to date of how sequence diversity in humans is the result of an evolving interaction between sex, age, mutation type and location in the genome.
Not exact matches
Today's
study,
published in the journal Nature Communications, shows that a
major Himalayan river, the Sutlej River, used to flow along the trace of the Ghaggar - Hakra river but rapidly changed course upstream eight thousand years ago.
The
study,
published today in open - access journal Frontiers in Medicine, also shows no
major difference in filling failure rates between traditional amalgam and newer composite resin fillings.
Ratti, Szell, and Senseable City researcher Sebastian Grauwin are co-authors of a new paper about the
study, «Contraction of online response to
major events,»
published today in the journal PLoS ONE.
In the
study, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers at UC San Francisco and
published today in the Journal of Neuroscience, scientists transplanted inhibitory neuron progenitors — early - stage brain cells that have the capacity to develop into mature inhibitory neurons — into two mouse models of Alzheimer's disease, apoE4 or apoE4 with accumulation of amyloid beta, another
major contributor to Alzheimer's.
A
study published in Science in March 2012 found that ocean acidity may be increasing faster
today than it has during four
major extinctions in the last 300 million years.
Several
major studies,
published today, concur that virtually all current global human populations stem from a single wave of expansion out of Africa.
The pilot
study,
published today in «Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,» sheds light on the climate system of a region whose rainfall patterns have a
major impact on global climate.
In a new
study published today in the journal Nature Communications, a research team from the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at Roswell Park Cancer Institute reports their discovery of a
major mechanism by which cells regulate this important and multifunctional tumor suppressor, opening up new avenues for cancer research and treatment.