Inhibition of nonsense-mediated decay turns immunologically cold tumors hot by increasing the amount of mutant RNA leading to an increase in T-cell-targetable neoantigens on the cell surface.
A new study shows that giving mice the human version of a gene changes their squeak, suggesting some of the genetic ...
A new study shows that giving mice the human version of a gene changes their squeak, suggesting some of the genetic underpinnings of language.
Mice carrying a gene variant present in nearly every human on Earth — and not by extinct relatives including Neanderthals — produce more complex chirps than normal rodents 1. The finding sugge ...
When the scientists put the human version of NOVA1 into mice, the animals made more complex sounds. Erich Jarvis, a neuroscientist at Rockefeller University and a co-author of the new study ...
Putting the uniquely human version of a certain gene into mice changed the way that those animals vocalized to each other, suggesting that this gene may play a role in speech and language.
Putting the uniquely human version of a certain gene into mice changed the way that those animals vocalized to each other, suggesting that this gene may play a role in speech and language.