sciencedaily.com — Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry discovered a novel cellular response towards persistent DNA damage: After being recognized and initially processed by the cellular machinery, the broken chromosome is extensively scanned for homology and the break itself is later tethered to the nuclear envelope.
Feb 17, 2009 View in Crawl 4
king8eggFeb 17, 2009
I totally expected it to say "... like how programs handle broken code... by seg faulting"
misterrockFeb 17, 2009
the stimulus won't work because there aren't enough tax cuts.
Closed AccountFeb 17, 2009
I like turtles.
teh_spazzFeb 18, 2009
f**k you. You probably went through undergrad wanting to get all the perfect scores and bitched when you lost 2 points. Real medicine deals with scientists. GOD I HATE PREMEDS LIKE YOU.(I'm a premed)
grok22Feb 18, 2009
good thing its just turtles all the way down
bandjwood4Jun 17, 2009
My daughter has recently been diagnosed with a deletion of chromosome xq13.3q21.1 We have been told that it is very rare for a female to be effected by an X deletion, but apparently my daughter is one of the very few. I am desperate for information about this disorder. We are currently working with our local children's hospital but they have very little information to provide. I would gladly appreciate any information available. Thank you!!