From 500 views in the first two months to over 100,000 views in the last few days.
The ADA opinion piece that was too scary to be distributed at the ADA meeting has gone full Streisand.
Y'all are doing the Lord's work.
Carl T. Bergstrom
Our latest work is now online in NSMB: maternal yolk carries microRNAs from the intestine to embryos, shaping gene regulation and stress resilience in the next generation.
rdcu.be/fj8Er
#Epigenetics #microRNA #Inheritance @pasteur.fr @devstempasteur.bsky.social @erc.europa.eu
www.nature.com
In this study, the authors use the Caenorhabditis elegans model organism to show that maternal microRNAs are delivered from the intestine to embryos by the yolk, where they regulate gene expression an...
Just arrived in Florence for CETAF59 @eurotaxonomy.cetaf.org
and I am looking forward to present The Arctic University Museum of Norway as a new member!
cetaf.org/cetaf59-gene...
Curious new paper entitled "miRNA modules for precise, tunable control of gene expression": Molecular Cell www.cell.com/molecular-ce...
Last year we collected samples in Naples @szndohrn.bsky.social and briefly chatted about a possible project together, this year Riccardo was invited by @uitnorgesarktiske.bsky.social and we are working on a proposal together!! #Tunicata #RNA #Museomics
www.cell.com
Du et al. engineered compact, synthetic microRNA circuits that exploit multispecific
miRNA targeting to enable uniform, tunable protein expression across broad gene dosages.
These modular circuits sup...
CETAF59 will bring together the European taxonomic community to discuss strategy implementation, research collaboration, collections, and future initiatives.
'If a control experiment fails, does that mean that the entire experiment is poorly designed and you must restart from scratch? Often, yes— but not always. I present five examples where failed control experiments triggered entirely new fields of research.'
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
EMBO Reports - When experimental controls go wrong, it does not necessarily mean your experiment is flawed. It might well be the first sign of something unexpected.