RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,471 results for "Truth and Reconciliation Commission" — page 64 of 124
Z_5_11 — Microbiome-Host Coevolution: Holobiont Theory, Gut Ecology, and Metabolic Symbiosis
Microbiome-host coevolution refers to the deep, reciprocal evolutionary relationship between multicellular organisms and the complex microbial communities (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) that inhabit their bodies — p
Z_5_23 — Gene Drives: CRISPR-Based Inheritance Manipulation and Ecological Engineering
A gene drive is a genetic engineering technology that biases inheritance in sexually reproducing organisms, causing a modified gene to spread through a population at rates far exceeding normal Mendelian inheritance (~50%
Z_5_03 — Metabolomics: The Small-Molecule Landscape of Life
Metabolomics — the comprehensive study of all small-molecule metabolites (<~1,500 Da) present in a biological sample (cell, tissue, organ, biofluid, organism) — is the newest of the major "-omics" disciplines (after geno
Z_5_01 — CRISPR Applications and Genetic Engineering
CRISPR-Cas9 (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) is a revolutionary gene-editing technology adapted from a bacterial immune defense system, enabling precise, programmable modification of DNA in vir
Z_5_08 — Mitochondrial DNA: Maternal Inheritance, Ancient Lineages, and Disease
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) — the small, circular genome (~16,569 base pairs in humans) contained within mitochondria — encodes 37 genes essential for oxidative phosphorylation (13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNAs, 2
Z_5_15 — Synthetic Genomes: Designing and Building Life from Scratch
Synthetic genomics — the design, construction, and transplantation of complete genomes assembled from chemically synthesized oligonucleotides — represents one of the most ambitious enterprises in modern biology, with the
Z_3_16 — Genomic Conflict and Selfish Genetic Elements
Selfish genetic elements (SGEs) — sequences of DNA that promote their own transmission at the expense of the host organism or other genes in the genome — reveal that the genome is not a cooperating community of genes but
Z_3_04 — Comparative Genomics and Cross-Species Analysis
Comparative genomics — the systematic comparison of genome sequences across species — has become the primary tool for understanding genome evolution, identifying functionally important sequences, and reconstructing the T
Z_3_15 — Genetics of Intelligence: Polygenicity, GWAS, and the Heritability Debate
The genetics of intelligence — attempts to identify the specific genetic variants that influence individual differences in cognitive ability — represents one of the most complex and contentious areas in human genetics. H
Z_3_11 — Genetic Mosaicism and Chimerism
A fundamental assumption of genetics — that every cell in an individual's body carries the same genome — is wrong. Genetic mosaicism (the presence of two or more genetically distinct cell populations within an individual
Z_3_05 — Viral Integration and Endogenous Retroviruses
Approximately 8% of the human genome consists of human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) — the remnants of ancient retroviral infections that integrated into germline cells and were subsequently inherited vertically like a
Z_2_13 — Pharmacogenomics and Personalized Medicine
Pharmacogenomics — the study of how genetic variation influences drug response — is among the most clinically actionable applications of human genetics. Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are the 4th–6th leading cause of deat
Z_2_10 — Genetics of Aging and Progeria
Aging — the progressive decline in physiological function leading to increased vulnerability to disease and death — has a substantial genetic component: twin studies estimate heritability of human lifespan at ~25–30% (He
Z_2_08 — Prion Genetics and Misfolded Proteins
Prions are infectious agents composed entirely of misfolded protein — the only known pathogen that contains no nucleic acid (no DNA, no RNA). The protein-only hypothesis (Stanley Prusiner, 1982 — Nobel Prize 1997) states
Z_2_17 — Prion Biology: Self-Propagating Protein Misfolding and Transmissible Encephalopathies
Prions — proteinaceous infectious particles lacking nucleic acid — represent a paradigm-shattering departure from the central dogma that biological information flows from DNA to RNA to protein. The protein-only hypothesi
Z_2_18 — Pharmacogenomics and Precision Medicine
Pharmacogenomics — the study of how genetic variation affects individual responses to drugs — aims to replace the "one-size-fits-all" prescribing model with genotype-guided therapy, selecting the right drug at the right
Z_2_09 — Mitochondrial Genetics and Diseases
Human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a 16,569-bp circular genome encoding 37 genes: 13 proteins (all subunits of the oxidative phosphorylation/OXPHOS complexes I, III, IV, and V), 22 transfer RNAs, and 2 ribosomal RNAs. Un
Z_2_04 — Genetic Disorders and Inborn Errors of Metabolism
Genetic disorders — diseases caused by mutations in single genes (monogenic) or chromosomal abnormalities — affect ~3–5% of live births and collectively represent thousands of distinct conditions catalogued in the Online
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_2_14 — Genetics of Longevity and Blue Zones
The genetics of human longevity — why some individuals live past 100 while most do not — is a field where heritability is modest, effect sizes are small, and environmental factors dominate, yet several genetic pathways h
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