Daily non-political popular news in brief.
Genome of yellow fever/dengue fever mosquito sequenced
05-17-2007 · EurekAlert!Developing new strategies to prevent and control yellow fever and dengue fever has become more possible with the completion of the first draft of the genome sequence of Aedes aegypti mosquito.
Read more »
Keywords: genome, yellow, fever, dengue, mosquito, sequenced
« Previous | Next »
Similar news on "Genome of yellow fever/dengue fever mosquito sequenced":
- Researchers put the bite on mosquitoes
01-16-2008 · EurekAlert!
Few things sting like a mosquito's bite -- especially if that bite carries a disease such as malaria, yellow fever, Dengue fever or West Nile virus. But if a team of University of Arizona researchers has its way, one day mosquito bites may prove deadly to the mosquitoes.
Similar news · Read more »
- K-State biologist hopes mosquito can break viral chain
05-21-2007 · EurekAlert!
Most people do their best to avoid mosquitoes. But this summer Kansas State University Professor Rollie Clem will play the wary host to his own homegrown swarm of Aedes aegypti, the yellow fever mosquito. He's made a room ready for them, and even a menu.
Similar news · Read more »
- Dengue strikes United States
10-28-2006 · Science News Online
Texas has been hit with the first-ever outbreak of dengue hemorrhagic fever in the continental United States.
Similar news · Read more »
- WUSTL researchers spearhead key genome initiative
12-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
The complete genome of a moss has been sequenced, providing scientists an important evolutionary link between single-celled algae and flowering plants, suggests a study published in the journal Science. A major landmark in understanding how plants originated, the moss genome sequencing offers insight into the conquest of land by plants and sheds light on the evolution of the plant kingdom, says study co-author Ralph S. Quatrano, a biology professor at Washington University in St. Louis.
Similar news · Read more »
- Genome of marine organism tells of humans' unicellular ancestors
02-14-2008 · EurekAlert!
A ubiquitous but little-known marine organism, the choanoflagellate, is the last one-celled ancestor of humans and provides insight into how cells learned to assemble into multicelled organisms. The genome of the choanoflagellate Monisiga brevicollis has now been sequenced and, according to UC Berkeley's Nicole King, offers clues to the origin of the glue that holds many-celled animals together and how cells learned to communicate.
Similar news · Read more »
- Deep in the ocean, a clam that acts like a plant
02-20-2007 · EurekAlert!
How does life survive in the black depths of the ocean? At the surface, sunlight allows green plants to "fix" carbon from the air to build their bodies. Around hydrothermal vents deep in the ocean live communities of giant clams with no gut and no functional digestive system, depending on symbiotic bacteria to use energy locked up in hydrogen sulfide to replace sunlight. Now, the genome of this symbiont has been completely sequenced.
Similar news · Read more »
- Moss genome shows how plants invaded the land and learned to survive heat and drought
12-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
A dainty yet ephemeral moss is the latest organism to have its genome sequenced, providing scientists with keys to the genetic changes that allowed aquatic plants to venture onto land. The genes for tolerance to desiccation, for example, may aid researchers seeking to develop drought-tolerant biofuel feedstocks. Proposed by UC Berkeley and Washington University botanists, the moss genome sequencing was conducted by DOE's Joint Genome Institute and annotated by scientists from more than 40 institutions.
Similar news · Read more »
- Identification of carbon dioxide receptors in insects may help fight infectious disease
12-13-2006 · EurekAlert!
Mosquitoes use the carbon dioxide people exhale as a way to identify a potential food source. But when they bite, they can pass on a number of dangerous infectious diseases, such as malaria and yellow fever. Now, reporting in Nature, Leslie Vosshall's laboratory at Rockefeller University has identified the two molecular receptors in fruit flies that help these insects detect carbon dioxide. The findings could prove to be important against the fight against global infectious disease.
Similar news · Read more »
- A prickly subject: The sea urchin genome is sequenced
11-09-2006 · EurekAlert!
The sea urchin revealed a number of surprising details about its genetic makeup and its similarity to humans in a paper announcing the completed sequencing of the organism's genome in today's issue of Science. Maine scientists will use the genome to further research in human development and disease. The genome will also provide important biological data that may assist marine biologists in re-establishing the New England urchin population.
Similar news · Read more »
- Scientists complete genome sequence of fungus responsible for dandruff, skin disorders
11-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
Scientists from P&G Beauty announced that they successfully sequenced the complete genome for Malassezia globosa, a naturally-occurring fungus responsible for the onset of dandruff and other skin conditions in humans. Results of the genome sequencing are published in today's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Similar news · Read more »