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Researchers reveal that the guinea pig pre-implantation embryo is very similar to the human embryo, spurring a better understanding of infertility and early human development.
Experts call for more research before parents panic—and offer ways to reduce exposure to microplastics in the meantime.
A study reveals that guinea pigs can serve as a robust model for understanding human pre-implantation development. Their similarities to humans in early embryogenesis open new avenues for infertility ...
17d
News-Medical.Net on MSNStudy uncovers conserved development and evolutionary innovations in the human hypothalamusIn a new study published in Developmental Cell on April 8, a research team led by Prof. WU Qingfeng at the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has ...
an associate professor at UdeM and holder of a Canada Research Chair in Functional Genomics of Reproduction and Development. “Our lab is focused on understanding infertility and early human ...
From April 24 to 26, Barcelona will host the 11th edition of the IVIRMA International Congress, the third most relevant congress in the world in terms of size and scientific dissemination in the field ...
In an abrupt reversal, the US Department of Health and Human Services said Thursday that it no longer plans to cut funding ...
An article published in Oxford’s Journal of Medical Ethics argues in favor of biotechnologically altering ova to permit lesbians to engage in same-sex biological reproduction. Bioethicist Adrian ...
World Book and Copyright Day on April 23 reminds us of literature’s power in shaping minds, building inclusive cultures and ...
Phys.org on MSN17d
Researchers unveil evolutionary conservation and innovation in mammalian hypothalamus developmentWU Qingfeng at the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has demonstrated the conserved cellular development and evolutionary innovations in the developing ...
Researchers discovered two new crocodile species on Mexican islands using genetic and skull data. These island crocodiles ...
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