Genomics

Genomics

Book cover for "There's Got to Be a Better Way" by Nelson P. Repenning and Donald C. Kieffer, featuring dynamic work design elements with a butterfly and broken glass on a white background bordered in orange.
MIT Sloan’s Nelson P. Repenning and Donald C. Kieffer outline their tried-and-tested solution for stubborn workflow blockages.
A gloved hand holds a small vial in front of a colorful, blurred background resembling a DNA sequence.
"The promise of the Human Genome Project has finally arrived."
Transparent perfume bottle surrounded by floating pink spheres with intricate patterns on a dark background.
Vaccines targeting some of our deadliest cancers are showing promise in early trials.
Carnivorous carnivorous carnivorous carnivorous carnivorous carnivorous.
Carnivorous plants fascinate as much now as when their gruesome diet was first discovered.
A picture of a dollar bill with a wave pattern.
To put things in perspective, the cost of sequencing a single genome in 2012 was around $10,000.
a keyhole in the middle of a green field.
From gene expression to protein design, large language models are creating a suite of powerful genomic tools.
An increase in genetic regulatory elements explains how modern humans evolved bigger brains than other hominins.
crayfish
All marbled crayfish descended from a single clone discovered in Heidelberg, Germany in 1995. 
“It’s a big resource in the way the human genome is a big resource, in that you can go in and do discovery-based research."
The Human Genome Project put together 92% of our DNA blueprint. Here's what it took to complete the rest.
An expert explains the emerging science of nutrigenomics.