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Mice can teach us about human disease | Science News for Students - 0 views

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    While humans and mice look and act very differently, 85 to 90 percent of our genes are the same or similar. So if scientists can understand the instructions in every mouse gene, people will get a good idea of the instructions in virtually every human gene as well.
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Glowing Plants on Kickstarter - National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science - 0 views

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    This case study is centered on a real scenario from 2013 in which the Kickstarter fundraising platform included a fundraising proposal from a group wanting to use synthetic biology to make glowing plants. The proposal raised controversy because the Glowing Plant group offered to give away their genetically-modified glowing plant product to investors.  Kickstarter subsequently changed its policy to prevent use of genetically modified organisms as rewards or incentives to investors. This case study was developed for a college first-year seminar focused on the ethics of synthetic biology, and was introduced during the first week of the semester. The case uses the jigsaw teaching method to introduce students both to the mechanics of synthetic biology and to questions about how we should distribute the benefits and burdens associated with new or emerging technologies. It could be adapted for courses in introductory college biology, genetics or bioethics.
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Sneaky! Virus sickens plants, but helps them multiply | Science News for Students - 0 views

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    One common virus takes a sneaky route to success. It doesn't kill its leafy hosts. Instead, it makes infected plants smell more attractive to bees. That ensures this germ will have a new generation of the plants to host it in the future.
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Can humans get norovirus from their dogs? | EurekAlert! Science News - 0 views

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    Washington, D.C. - April 10, 2015 - Human norovirus may infect our canine companions, according to research published online April 1 in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology, a publication of the American Society for Microbiology. That raises the possibility of dog-to-human transmission, said first author Sarah Caddy, VetMB, PhD, MRCVS, a veterinarian and PhD student at the University of Cambridge, and Imperial College, London, UK. Norovirus is the leading cause of food-borne illness in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
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Malaria parasites lure mosquitoes to infected hosts | Science News for Students - 0 views

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    A microbe that causes malaria tricks mosquitos into helping it spread, a new study finds. The microbe is a parasite that leaves a chemical behind in the blood of the people or other animals that it infects. Mosquitoes are drawn to scent of blood hosting this chemical. It entices them to slurp up some of the infected meal. Then voila! The parasites get airlifted from their old host to new ones. And so malaria spreads.
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Sexist attitudes about smarts may emerge by first grade | Science News for Students - 0 views

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    Girls are less likely than boys to think that women have genius potential, a new study finds. And that stereotype can show up in kids as young as six.
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