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362 results for "selfish genetic element" — page 6 of 19
Z_2_06 — Nutrigenomics and Diet-Gene Interactions
Nutrigenomics — the study of how genetic variation influences nutritional requirements, dietary responses, and disease susceptibility — and its complement nutrigenetics (how diet influences gene expression) represent a r
Z_1_04 — Gene Expression and Regulation
Gene expression regulation — the molecular mechanisms controlling when, where, and how much each gene is active — is the central process that enables a single genome to produce ~200 distinct cell types, orchestrate embry
Z_1_05 — Genomic Imprinting and Parent-of-Origin Effects
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon in which a gene's expression depends on whether it was inherited from the mother or the father — violating the standard Mendelian assumption that both parental copies functi
Z_1_03 — Human Genome Project and Its Legacy
The Human Genome Project (HGP), launched in 1990 and completed in 2003, was the largest coordinated biological research effort in history — a $3 billion, 13-year international collaboration to sequence all ~3.2 billion b
Z_1_19 — Non-Coding RNA and Gene Regulation
Non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) — RNA molecules that are transcribed from the genome but do not encode proteins — have emerged as central regulators of gene expression, challenging the classical "one gene–one protein" paradigm
Z_1_15 — Long Non-Coding RNA: The Dark Matter of the Transcriptome
Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) — RNA transcripts longer than 200 nucleotides that do not encode proteins — represent one of the most surprising and rapidly expanding frontiers of molecular biology. The human genome encod
Z_1_10 — Chromosome Evolution and Karyotype
Karyotype — the number, size, and morphology of chromosomes in a cell — varies enormously across species, from n=1 in the ant Myrmecia pilosula to n=630 in the fern Ophioglossum reticulatum. Humans have 2n=46 (23 pairs),
Z_4_23 — Memory as Physical and Molecular Phenomenon
What is a memory made of? The question has driven neuroscience from Santiago Ramón y Cajal's 1894 hypothesis that learning strengthens connections between neurons, through Donald Hebb's 1949 postulate that "neurons that
Y_1_02 — Morphic Resonance and Sheldrake's Hypothesis
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by biologist Rupert Sheldrake (b. 1942, Cambridge-trained plant physiologist) that proposes nature operates by habits, not fixed laws, and that organisms and systems are influen
K_4_06 — Collective Trauma, Cultural Memory, and Intergenerational Transmission
Collective trauma — the psychological impact of catastrophic events on entire communities, nations, or peoples — and its intergenerational transmission across generations is one of the most important intersections of psy
Language_DNA_Migration_Triangulation
The last two decades have witnessed a revolution in our understanding of human migration history, driven by the integration of computational linguistics, paleogenomics, and archaeology into a unified analytical framework
INTERDOC_11 — Mitochondrial Eve, Y-Chromosomal Adam, and the Convergence Problem
Mitochondrial Eve — the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of all living humans through an unbroken maternal line — was identified through mtDNA analysis by Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan Wilson at UC Berkeley i
ZB_2_12 — Biological Scaling and Allometry
Allometry — the study of how biological characteristics scale with body size — reveals some of the most universal quantitative laws in biology. From bacteria to blue whales, spanning 21 orders of magnitude in body mass,
ZB_2_05 — Aging, Longevity, and the Biology of Death
Why do organisms age and die? This question — one of the oldest in human inquiry — has yielded remarkable molecular answers in recent decades. Leonard Hayflick's 1961 discovery that human cells have a finite replicative
ZB_5_14 — Conservation Biology
Conservation biology — the scientific study of biodiversity loss and the methods to protect species, habitats, and ecosystems — was formally established as a discipline by Michael Soulé (University of California, San Die
ZB_5_05 — Extinction Biology and De-Extinction
Extinction — the complete disappearance of a species — is a permanent event that has shaped life's history as profoundly as origination. Background extinction (the normal, continuous loss of species) proceeds at ~0.1–1 s
ZC_2_03 — Intergenerational & Collective Trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to the next — a phenomenon observed across populations including Holocaust survivor families, Indigenous communities subjected
G_4_21 — Archaeogenomics: Ancient DNA and the Reconstruction of Human History
Archaeogenomics — the extraction, sequencing, and analysis of DNA from ancient biological remains — has revolutionized understanding of human migration, admixture, and population history since Svante Pääbo's pioneering w
O_2_01 — Volcanism, Supervolcanoes, and Geological Catastrophism
Volcanic eruptions are among the most powerful forces on Earth, capable of altering global climate, triggering mass extinctions, collapsing civilizations, and imprinting themselves on human mythology for millennia. The T
T_2_21 — Collective Trauma Psychology
Collective trauma refers to the psychological impact of traumatic events experienced by entire communities, populations, or cultural groups — events such as genocide, slavery, colonialism, war, natural disasters, and pan
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