Coimbatore: Kovai man gives stem cells, saves life of leukaemia victim – Deccan Chronicle
Deccan Chronicle |
Coimbatore: Kovai man gives stem cells, saves life of leukaemia victim
Deccan Chronicle … registered as a donor in October 2016 at the ‘Masonic Clinic Coimbatore’. His family lost their daughter when she was just three-years-old. In a rendezvous with Garima’s family, Gurumoothi’s family saw their daughter in Garima. Present on the … When a cancer survivor met her saviourBusiness Standard |
Deccan Chronicle |
Coimbatore: Kovai man gives stem cells, saves life of leukaemia victim
Deccan Chronicle … registered as a donor in October 2016 at the ‘Masonic Clinic Coimbatore’. His family lost their daughter when she was just three-years-old. In a rendezvous with Garima’s family, Gurumoothi’s family saw their daughter in Garima. Present on the … When a cancer survivor met her saviourNews Today |
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Sandhoff disease study shows proof of principle for gene therapy
Science Daily A paper appearing in the March 1 issue of the Journal of Lipid Research by senior investigators Tifft and Richard Proia and lead author Laura Allende of NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, and their colleagues … |
The Canberra Times |
CRISPR will save lives – and technology can’t come soon enough
The Canberra Times Humans have been tinkering with genes for as long we know. It’s why we have edible bananas instead of bulbous things with hard seeds, or corn that looks like corn and not grass. Well before the discovery of the gene, we’ve been breeding them in and out … |
The Sydney Morning Herald |
CRISPR will save lives – and technology can’t come soon eough
The Sydney Morning Herald The potential applications of CRISPR are enormous. It’s the closest we’ve ever come to a cure for cancer. We’ve already been able to cure HIV infection in animal models, and even in human cell cultures, by removing the viral genes that insert … |
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CRISPR will save lives – and technology can’t come soon eough
The Sydney Morning Herald The potential applications of CRISPR are enormous. It’s the closest we’ve ever come to a cure for cancer. We’ve already been able to cure HIV infection in animal models, and even in human cell cultures, by removing the viral genes that insert … |
