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Science Functional Genomics News
News Archive

Week ended 24 September 1999

Team wrapping up sequence of first human chromosome
(Science, 24 September 1999)

On the way to a better immunosuppressant?
(Science, 24 September 1999)

AIDS researchers blast NIH peer review plan
(Science, 24 September 1999)

University of Illinois: Chancellor quits after research shutdown
(Science, 24 September 1999)

The race to the ribosome structure
(Science, 24 September 1999)

Challenge from electron microscopy
(Science, 24 September 1999)

Tiny flies may offer cancer clues
(ScienceNOW, 23 September 1999)

Vaccinations without the ouch
(ScienceNOW, 20 September 1999)

Week ended 17 September 1999

FDA weighs using tumor cell lines for vaccine development
(Science, 17 September 1999)

European Union: Tough questions greet new research chief
(Science, 17 September 1999)

Wellcome seeks new home for business park
(Science, 17 September 1999)

How to pick an engineered seedling
(ScienceNOW, 14 September 1999)

Week ended 10 September 1999

Animal research: Research lab to surrender chimps
(Science, 10 September 1999)

Cancer research: A new way to combat therapy side effects
(Science, 10 September 1999)

Science interview: View from the top of a biomedical empire (Harold Varmus)
(Science, 10 September 1999)

Week ended 3 September 1999

Special Feature: The World of Postdocs
(Science, 3 September 1999)

NIH's online publishing venture ready for launch
(Science, 3 September 1999)

Introducing proteins into the body's cells
(Science, 3 September 1999)

Salk Institute president to step down
(Science, 3 September 1999)

Plant genetics: A paternity case for wine lovers
(Science, 3 September 1999)

Plant biotechnology: Australian center develops tools for developing world
(Science, 3 September 1999)

Dolly's diverse heritage
(ScienceNOW, 3 September 1999)

Genes to remember
(ScienceNOW, 1 September 1999)

Week ended 27 August 1999

Research risks: California probes prison teens study
(Science, 27 August 1999)

Selenium's role in infertility explained
(Science, 27 August 1999)

Wiggling and undulating out of an X-ray shortage
(Science, 27 August 1999)

Ribosome finally begins to yield its complete structure
(Science, 27 August 1999)

The automated approach to protein structure
(Science, 27 August 1999)

International Botanical Congress meeting: New ways to glean medicines from plants
(Science, 27 August 1999)

Lean mice have youthful cells
(ScienceNOW, 27 August 1999)

Former Rockefeller president to head HFSP
(ScienceNOW, 23 August 1999)

Week ended 20 August 1999

Fraud finding triggers payback demand
(Science, 20 August 1999)

Animal testing: One mouse's meat is another one's poison
(Science, 20 August 1999)

How chromatin changes its shape
(Science, 20 August 1999)

Clinging to histones
(Science, 20 August 1999)

Can a retrovirus cause breast cancer?
(ScienceNOW, 18 August 1999)

Data rule, Round Two
(ScienceNOW, 17 August 1999)

The genes behind septic shock
(ScienceNOW, 16 August 1999)

Dissecting a virus
(ScienceNOW, 16 August 1999)

Week ended 13 August 1999

Deep Green rewrites evolutionary history of plants
(Science, 13 August 1999)

New genes boost rice nutrients
(Science, 13 August 1999)

Japan: Panel examines national universities
(Science, 13 August 1999)

Animal research: 50 monkeys taken from Indian lab
(Science, 13 August 1999)

Mining the genome for drugs
(Science, 13 August 1999)

The man who would spin genes into gold
(Science, 13 August 1999)

Many modes of transport for an embryo's signals
(Science, 13 August 1999)

Biorhythms of addiction
(ScienceNOW, 13 August 1999)

Build your own virus
(ScienceNOW, 11 August 1999)

Week ended 6 August 1999

E-biomed morphs to E-biosci, focus shifts to reviewed papers
(Science, 6 August 1999)

Gene linked to faulty cholesterol transport
(Science, 6 August 1999)

Flawed gene blamed for sleeping disorder
(ScienceNOW, 5 August 1999)

The oldest flower
(ScienceNOW, 4 August 1999)

Hearts that refuse to mend
(ScienceNOW, 4 August 1999)

Week ended 30 July 1999

Report of new hepatitis virus has researchers intrigued and upset
(Science, 30 July 1999)

Stem cells as potential nerve therapy
(Science, 30 July 1999)

Keck gives $110 million for USC initiatives
(Science, 30 July 1999)

Gaining new insight into the molecular basis of evolution
(Science, 30 July 1999)

Antibiotics against a genetic disorder?
(ScienceNOW, 30 July 1999)

Merck reenters AIDS vaccine field
(ScienceNOW, 28 July 1999)

Glowing sperm sheds light on sex wars
(ScienceNOW, 28 July 1999)

Week ended 23 July 1999

Ethicists back stem cell research, White House treads cautiously
(Science, 23 July 1999)

Michigan plans massive investment in biotech
(Science, 23 July 1999)

Circadian rhythms: CRY's clock role differs in mice, flies
(Science, 23 July 1999)

Gene sequencers target malaria mosquito
(Science, 23 July 1999)

X-ray crystallography without crystals
(Science, 23 July 1999)

Data disclosure: Congress votes down delay in access law
(Science, 23 July 1999)

U.S.-China ties: Biomedical group lobbies NIH
(Science, 23 July 1999)

Genes make chimps glad or sad
(ScienceNOW, 21 July 1999)

Turning a rice virus against itself
(ScienceNOW, 20 July 1999)

Anti-immune trick unveiled in Salmonella
(ScienceNOW, 19 July 1999)

Week ended 16 July 1999

Special Feature: Plant Biotechnology: Food and Feed
(Science, 16 July 2000)
Engineering plants to cope with metals
Crop engineering goes south

Belgian socialist tapped to head EU research
(Science, 16 July 1999)

Human Genome Project: Commercial firms win U.S. sequencing funds
(Science, 16 July 1999)

U.S., European backers differ on E-biomed plan
(Science, 16 July 1999)

Repairing the genome's spelling mistakes
(Science, 16 July 1999)

Surgically altering plant genes
(Science, 16 July 1999)

"Gutsy" endorsement for stem cell research
(ScienceNOW, 16 July 1999)

Mouse house moves west
(ScienceNOW, 15 July 1999)

DNA on the chopping block
(ScienceNOW, 14 July 1999)

Green means go for protein scientists
(ScienceNOW, 12 July 1999)

Week ended 9 July 1999

Genetic testing: Beryllium screening raises ethical issues
(Science, 9 July 1999)

Animal welfare: New Indian rules disrupt research
(Science, 9 July 1999)

Japan readies huge increase in biotech
(Science, 9 July 1999)

Evolution '99: DNA and field data help plumb evolution's secrets
(Science, 9 July 1999)

Genome shattered to smithereens
(ScienceNOW, 8 July 1999)

New teams join Human Genome Project
(ScienceNOW, 8 July 1999)

Clinical ethics office bumped upstairs
(ScienceNOW, 8 July 1999)

Week ended 2 July 1999

Human genome: A good SNP may be hard to find
(Science, 2 July 1999)

Bioinformatics: OECD to set up global facility on biodiversity
(Science, 2 July 1999)

Developmental biology: How to get a heart in the right place
(Science, 2 July 1999)

Frog Is a prince of a new model organism
(Science, 2 July 1999)

News Focus: Hepatitis C
(Science, 2 July 2000)
The scientific challenge of hepatitis C
Public health effort unwittingly spread HCV
Chiron stakes out its territory

Potential target found for antimetastasis drugs
(Science, 2 July 1999)

Danes bring DNA analysis to the heart of Africa
(Science, 2 July 1999)

Hepatitis C on demand
(ScienceNOW, 1 July 1999)

Pint-sized DNA champ
(ScienceNOW, 29 June 1999)

Bioethics panel backs embryo research
(ScienceNOW, 29 June 1999)

Reversal of misfortune
(ScienceNOW, 29 June 1999)


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