Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
How genetic engineering could reshape medicine and human life
Genetic engineering is moving from the lab bench into clinics, farms, and even family planning decisions, promising to change ...
After releasing two gene-edited rice varieties in May this year, scientists are now focusing on developing GE varieties of ...
Explore the necessity, types, challenges, and potential of bioremediation in India for environmental restoration and public ...
Presenting this year's trove of food-system books: memoirs, investigations, scientific works, cookbooks, and much more.
There are currently not enough agronomists and agricultural engineers in the agro-industrial complex, representatives of the ...
The Granulated Tapioca Market is estimated to be valued at USD 0.8 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 1.3 billion ...
Higher yields, greater resilience to climatic changes or diseases—the demands on crop plants are constantly growing. To address these challenges, researchers of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) ...
Phys.org on MSN
Genetic engineering: Changing the number of chromosomes in plants using molecular scissors
KIT researchers succeeded for the first time in reducing the number of chromosomes in a plant using the CRISPR/Cas method – surprisingly without affecting its growth The CRISPR/Cas molecular scissors ...
Some plants stay healthy even when a key nutrient drops. New research explains the root and cell tricks that help plants ...
As Earth's climate warms and changes, sustainable agricultural practices are critical for feeding a rapidly growing population. Can we genetically engineer crops to adapt to drought and other effects ...
Gene-edited crops are no safer than GMOs, and fast-tracking regulatory approval could trigger a costly backlash.
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