Gene Silencing Technology Is Quietly Moving Toward The Clinic
15th Nov 2006, 11:06 GMT
The gene silencing technology showcased in the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine is on an amazingly fast track toward use in treating a variety of serious diseases, according to an article scheduled for the Nov. 13 issue of the ACS's weekly newsmagazine, Chemical & Engineering News.
Gene Silencing Technology Is Quietly Moving Toward The Clinic related news:
- Characteristics Of Long-term Lung Cancer Survivors — ScienceDaily Headlines
- The Glimmering Promise of Gene Therapy — Technology Review Feed - BioTech Top Stories
- Wichita Clinic doctors to see patients in Park City — bizjournals.com Health Care:Physician Practices headlines
- Silencing the salty tongue in NBA — azcentral.com | sports
- The Advantageous Gene while We Were Just Hunters-Gatherers Now Threatens Indigenous Populations — Softpedia - Latest news
- IBM's Blue Gene/L Tops List of Fastest Computers — TechNewsWorld
- The Myth of the Fat Gene — LiveScience.com
- Gene Therapy: Proceed with Caution — Technology Review Feed - BioTech Top Stories
- Boeing begins using Moving Assembly Line for 777 Jetliners — Gizmag: Good Thinking
- Clinic backed smoking ban. — Environmental Health News
Latest news from ScienceDaily Headlines: Matter & Energy:
- Bridging Neurons And Electronics With Carbon Nanotubes
- Air Guitarists Rejoice: Engineers Design Wearable Instrument Shirt
- First Glimpse Of Protein Structure Holds Promise For New Way To Fight AIDS
- Cheaper Color Printing By Harnessing Ben Franklin's Electrostatic Forces
- Wireless Energy Could Power Consumer, Industrial Electronics
- Sticky Proteins Provide New Insight Into Drug Action
- Daylight Savings: Building With Natural Light
- Gene Machine: Cells Engineered To Prevent Sepsis Win Synthetic Biology Competition
- Honey, I Shrunk The Carbon Nanotubes!
- Listening To Gunshots May Save Lives And Wildlands