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Genetics

The Genetics of Putrid-Smelling Flowers

Some plants lure pollinators with the stench of decay using a gene related to one that fights odor in human breath

May 8, 2025

Reclaiming Samples of Ourselves

Artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg explores the ethics of human specimen collections in <i>Is a Biobank a Home?</i>

April 30, 2025

The Last of Their Kind

Are efforts to resurrect the northern white rhino more technological hubris than genuine conservation?

April 18, 2025

Why Elephants Rarely Get Cancer

What snakes, ferrets, and elephants are revealing about cancer resistance

March 11, 2025

How Neanderthals Kept Our Ancestors Warm

New DNA studies reveal more benefits from our hominin friends

January 24, 2025

How Life Really Works

Just as I uncovered a new way to understand life, I got news about my own.

November 6, 2023

Destroying an Idea Is a Path to Progress

Geneticist Paul Nurse on his Nobel Prize-winning discovery, the importance of failure, and a revelation about his own origins.

August 10, 2023

The Case Against the Selfish Gene

Richard Dawkins’ hypothesis buries a crucial part of life’s story.

A Universal Cancer Treatment?

A medicine that disrupts the DNA replication of cancer cells may be within reach.

October 5, 2022

After 100 Years of Research, Autism Remains a Puzzle

One geneticist is determined to piece together the causes.

July 20, 2022

Embryo Cells Set Patterns for Growth by Pushing and Pulling

Patterns that guide the development of feathers and other features can be set by mechanical forces in the embryo, not just by gradients of chemicals.

July 13, 2022

Life’s First Peptides May Have Grown on RNA Strands

RNA and peptides coevolving in the primordial world might have jointly served as a precursor to the modern ribosome.

May 25, 2022