Sentences with phrase «on human biology»

«Because mitochondria have such a crucial role in our physiology, changes in mitochondrial DNA can have profound effects on human biology,» he adds.
It is a tragedy that so many suffer or die through the use of inadequately tested drugs when tests based on human biology are readily available.
Living a Double Life 24 October 2003 MD / PhD programs give students two markedly different perspectives on human biology, and then launch them on two separate, simultaneous careers.
Understanding these similarities will allow us to carry out more accurate studies on human biology,» explains Roderic Guigó, one of the main researchers involved in the work and coordinator of the Bioinformatics and Genomics programme at the CRG.
Alternative cell lines, such as induced pluripotent stem cells generated from patient skin cells, offer a more accurate window on human biology, he says.
«Viruses are fantastic tools for shedding new light on human biology,» says Nevan Krogan, PhD, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institutes and a corresponding author on both papers.
When I first introduced problem - based learning into my classes on human biology, having taught about the various body systems for almost 10 years, I used the simple question: How does a cell in your big toe stay alive?
The simpering Pyra eventually reveals hidden depths on the inside, but her back - ruining bust is nothing short of an adolescent assault on human biology.
New tests based on human biology can predict many adverse reactions that animal tests fail to do, and could, for example, have detected the risk signals produced by Vioxx, which in animal studies appeared to be safe, and even beneficial to the heart.
MD / PhD programs give students two markedly different perspectives on human biology, and then launch them on two separate, simultaneous careers
Many HARs are located near genes that control fundamental developmental processes, 9 so their altered regulatory function could have profound effects on human biology.
The team tested two different «assistance profiles,» or patterns of wire - pulling: one based on human biology that applied force starting at the point of maximum hip extension observed in normal running, and one based on a simulation of exoskeleton - assisted running from a group at Stanford University that applied force slightly later in the running stride and suggested that the optimal point to provide assistive force might not be the same as the biological norm.
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