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Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute have shown that the 'pacemaker' controlling yeast cell division lies inside the nucleus rather than outside it, as previously thought.
Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute have shown that the 'pacemaker' controlling yeast cell division lies inside the nucleus rather than outside it, as previously thought.
Researchers have shown that the "pacemaker" controlling yeast cell division lies inside the nucleus rather than outside it, as previously thought.
New imaging tools reveal how within an hour of infection, the virus begins to alter our chromosomes to kick-start its own replication.
LINE-1, a "jumping gene" making up 20% of the genome, invades DNA during cell division using protein-RNA clusters, offering insights into genome evolution and disease. Viruses are masters of hijacking ...
If measured from beginning to end, the DNA in our cells is too long to fit into the cell's nucleus, explaining why it must be ...
If measured from beginning to end, the DNA in our cells is too long to fit into the cell’s nucleus, explaining why it must be ...
Mitochondria are cell organelles surrounded by a double membrane. In addition to numerous essential functions in the ...
Glucose levels influence physiology and adaptation rates under replication stress, yet core adaptive mutations remain ...