Nobel laureate David Baker’s latest foundation model can design proteins that interact to any biomolecule for broad biotech applications.
David Baker's lab at the University of Washington is announcing two major leaps in the field of AI-powered protein design.
Researchers examined five AI models on multiple genomic tasks to see how well they performed Models performed well overall, with each having strengths and weaknesses based on the desired task Study pr ...
The microbe Pyrodictium abyssi is an archaeon—a member of what's known as the third domain of life—and an extremophile. It ...
3don MSN
From static papers to living models: Turning limb development research into interactive science
The choreographed movements that cells perform to form complex biological shapes, like our hands, have fascinated scientists for centuries. Now, researchers at EMBL Barcelona have launched LimbNET, an ...
Fluorogenic DNA aptamers produce light only in the correct structural state, enabling programmable molecular logic, ...
Two 7,000-year-old mummies found in Libya reveal an isolated North African lineage and rewrite the genetic history of the ...
Researchers created a highly efficient gene-editing method that fixes multiple DNA mutations in a single step. The breakthrough could revolutionize genetic medicine by making treatments for complex ...
The Pioneer on MSN
Prompts to perception: The next leap in human-AI interaction
As artificial intelligence advances, the relationship between humans and machines is evolving, moving from simple typed ...
For decades, contract development and manufacturing organisations (CDMOs) have operated through fragmented models, with drug ...
This week in Science, Michael K. Rosen and 10 other members of a large collaboration at the Marine Biological Laboratory, the ...
The Yashica City 300 sits at the top of the City tree, sprouting a prime rather than zoom lens and a larger sensor than its ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results