Every day, billions of cells in your body divide, helping to replace old and injured cells with new ones. And each time this ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNUS supercomputer with 200,000 trillion moves per second shows how DNA repairs itselfScientists have tapped into the Summit supercomputer to study an elaborate molecular pathway called nucleotide excision ...
Researchers at Georgia State University used the Summit supercomputer to study an elaborate molecular pathway called ...
A new method for mapping torsion provides insights into the ways that the genome responds to the torsion generated by RNA polymerase II.
Elizabeth Jamieson’s lab examines how various DNA lesions damage DNA. She and her students use differential scanning calorimetry to see how these lesions alter the thermodynamic stability of the DNA ...
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