ZAROOCHI

Blamo! SCIENCE!: The Future of Science: Three Parents. →

blamoscience:

A controversial new method aims to eradicate many genetic diseases, especially those caused by mitochondrial defects. Flaws in mitochondrial cause debilitating and often life threatening disease in humans. So what’s the issue?

The technique involves taking one egg from the mother and…

(Source: )

— 2 months ago with 13 notes
I know it’s gonna happen just like that

I know it’s gonna happen just like that

(via autumnfever)

— 2 months ago with 60968 notes
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Lifts are fun!

— 2 months ago
sciencecenter:

Four hemophiliac patients successfully treated with gene therapy

Hemophilia, a disease whose victims can suffer serious internal bleeding and may bleed to death from injuries, has a long and eventful history. Caused by defective blood clotting factors, the disease has been with us since at least the second century, when a rabbi gave mothers whose first two sons had bled to death from circumcision wounds permission to leave the third sons uncircumcised. It also famously afflicted several members of European royal families. But a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine brings us a bit closer to a new kind of historic event: a cure.
Following up on years of preclinical trials, including the curing of hemophiliac mice earlier this year, scientists gave six patients a gene therapy treatment, injecting them with a specially built virus carrying a functioning version of the gene for the defective clotting factor. The virus inserted the gene into liver cells, which proceeded to manufacture the clotting factor, and the patients maintained elevated levels of it for over 6 months. Four of the patients were able to stop receiving injections of clotting factor (the current treatment) altogether.

sciencecenter:

Four hemophiliac patients successfully treated with gene therapy

Hemophilia, a disease whose victims can suffer serious internal bleeding and may bleed to death from injuries, has a long and eventful history. Caused by defective blood clotting factors, the disease has been with us since at least the second century, when a rabbi gave mothers whose first two sons had bled to death from circumcision wounds permission to leave the third sons uncircumcised. It also famously afflicted several members of European royal families. But a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine brings us a bit closer to a new kind of historic event: a cure.

Following up on years of preclinical trials, including the curing of hemophiliac mice earlier this year, scientists gave six patients a gene therapy treatment, injecting them with a specially built virus carrying a functioning version of the gene for the defective clotting factor. The virus inserted the gene into liver cells, which proceeded to manufacture the clotting factor, and the patients maintained elevated levels of it for over 6 months. Four of the patients were able to stop receiving injections of clotting factor (the current treatment) altogether.

(via fybiology)

— 3 months ago with 666 notes
Bridge drive Best cousins 4Lifeeee

Bridge drive Best cousins 4Lifeeee

— 5 months ago
Hey hottie..HOPE I’m sitting next to you for the flight LOL

Hey hottie..HOPE I’m sitting next to you for the flight LOL

(Source: make-hate, via hu-nt)

— 5 months ago with 1931 notes
fybiology:

a little late, but still awesome hahah

fybiology:

a little late, but still awesome hahah

— 5 months ago with 108 notes
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vogueweekend:

Diet Mtn Dew | Lana Del Rey

(Source: thethoughtsinmychest)

— 5 months ago with 436 notes