Cells forget. We’re learning how to make them remember. @GENYO University of Granada, Spain. www.landeiralab.ugr.es
David Landeira
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Excited to announce the International Workshop "Transcriptional memory in health & disease" in Baeza (Spain) this Oct 20-22! Discover how chromatin & networks encode cellular memory with top speakers. unia.es/estudios-y-a... pic.x.com/fjhBUrtRgb
Nature research paper: Dogs were widely distributed across western Eurasia during the Palaeolithic
go.nature.com/3NNGybD
The rates of more than a dozen cancers are increasing among adults under the age of 50. What are the reasons behind it?
go.nature.com/4cKxhLN
David Landeira
muyinteresante.okdiario.com/ciencia/para...
Nature
Nature
David Landeira
"The goal is not just more capable AI, but AI that is more intelligible, accountable, and aligned with human aims. The window for achieving that future is narrowing," argue Eric Horvitz and Robert West in a new #ScienceEditorial. https://scim.ag/4oaIYig
Science Magazine
🚨 New paper in Nature 🚨
Thrilled to be part of this fascinating collaborative study!
👉 SIRT7 regulates dosage compensation and safeguards the female X chromosome
rdcu.be/fnEZQ
A great example of how chromatin regulation continues to reveal unexpected layers of genome control!
If you cannot explain it in simple terms, you don't understand it well enough.
We are excited to be recruiting into 3 Associate Professorship's in @oxfordbiochemistry.bsky.social. Come join us as a colleague and benefit from our vibrant and multidisciplinary environment. Reach out to me if you have any questions. Please repost! (tinyurl.com/48deybuu) (tinyurl.com/4pdvjaft).
Graphical abstract from our new paper in Nucleic Acids Research with @saramaciasrna.bsky.social 🧬
DGCR8 prevents accumulation of endogenous dsRNA derived from Alu elements within mRNAs, avoiding aberrant activation of the interferon response.
academic.oup.com/nar/article/...
Aurora Ruiz-Herrera
Analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial genomes from archaeological canid remains found across Europe and Anatolia shows that a genetically homogeneous dog population was already widely distributed across the region by 15,000 years ago.
"I would like to emphasize the importance of question-driven science...young scientists might enjoy science more if they are thinking about questions rather than just collecting data" journals.biologists.com/jcs/article/...