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PETNewslettersIssue #137
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BioNews

Issue #137

Comment

Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
CC0 1.0
Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
Comment
18 June 2009 • 1 minute read

The royal media circus

by Juliet Tizzard

BioNews readers from outside the United Kingdom may be perplexed to read the reams of British press coverage of Sophie, Countess of Wessex's, ectopic pregnancy. After all, one in every 100 pregnancies is ectopic; so Sophie is hardly unusual, in this respect at least. Intense media interest in all things...

News

Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
CC0 1.0
Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
News
9 June 2009 • 1 minute read

Countess may need fertility treatment in the future

by BioNews

Sophie, the Countess of Wessex, underwent emergency surgery for an ectopic pregnancy last week. An ectopic pregnancy is when a fetus implants and develops outside of the uterus, usually in one of the fallopian tubes. As a result, one of the Countess' tubes had to be removed. She and her...

Image by Bill Sanderson via the Wellcome Collection, © Wellcome Trust Ltd 1990. Depicts Laocoön and his family (from Greek and Roman mythology) entwined in coils of DNA.
Image by Bill Sanderson via the Wellcome Collection, © Wellcome Trust Ltd 1990. Depicts Laocoön and his family entwined in coils of DNA (based on the figure of Laocoön from Greek and Roman mythology).
News
9 June 2009 • 1 minute read

US cloning developments

by BioNews

A US Senate panel has been told that Advanced Cell Technology (ACT), the Massachusetts biotechnology firm which recently announced that it had cloned a human embryo, might be in a position to extract stem cells from cloned embryos within six months. Michael West, president of ACT, said that this would...

PET BioNews
News
9 June 2009 • 1 minute read

Crick archive most Wellcome

by BioNews

The entire scientific archive of Francis Crick - one of the two British men who discovered the double-helical structure of DNA - is to be displayed in London. The Wellcome Trust has bought the archive, which includes letters, research papers and laboratory notebooks, for £1.8 million. Francis Crick was negotiating with a...

Image by Sílvia Ferreira, Cristina Lopo and Eileen Gentleman via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a single human stem cell embedded within a porous hydrogel matrix (false colour).
CC BY 4.0
Image by Sílvia Ferreira, Cristina Lopo and Eileen Gentleman via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a single human stem cell embedded within a porous hydrogel matrix (false-coloured cryogenic scanning electron micrograph).
News
9 June 2009 • 1 minute read

China and Sweden back cloning research

by BioNews

Chinese scientists have made progress in stem cell research by successfully curing a partially paralysed mouse. The mouse was injected four months ago with nerve stem cells derived from a human embryo. The mouse had lost the function of its back legs and the ability to urinate after a vertebrate...

Image by Peter Artymiuk via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts the shadow of a DNA double helix, on a background that shows the fluorescent banding of the output from a DNA sequencing machine.
CC BY 4.0
Image by Peter Artymiuk via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts the shadow of a DNA double helix, on a background that shows the fluorescent banding of the sequencing output from an automated DNA sequencing machine.
News
9 June 2009 • 1 minute read

Genetic links to breast cancer and early heart attack

by BioNews

Researchers working at the Breakthrough Tony Robins Breast Cancer Research Centre believe that it may one day be possible to take a 'genetic fingerprint' of all breast cancer tumours. This would mean that treatment can be directed specifically at individuals. The scientists believe that by seeing which genes are activated...

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