Genetics
The mutation making COVID-19 milder
24 Aug 2020Scientists at A*STAR have found that a mutation in SARS-CoV-2 called ∆382 leads to milder clinical outcomes, with implications for COVID-19 treatments and vaccines.
The COVID-19 outliers
16 Jul 2020An international genetics consortium seeks to unravel the mystery of why COVID-19 infection is silent in some cases and lethal in others.
Rethinking breast cancer risk
31 Mar 2020Jingmei Li is developing a risk scoring system for breast cancer that could help clinicians formulate better screening programs to catch the disease in its early stages.
Asian genomes in the spotlight
24 Feb 2020A*STAR scientists have created the world’s largest multi-ethnic Asian genetic database to further biomedical research and shed light on the origins of three major ethnic groups in the region.
Commemorating the life of Sydney Brenner
18 Jul 2019Dr. Sydney Brenner, the visionary molecular biologist and Nobel laureate who turned a humble soil worm into one of the most-studied organisms in biology, passed away on April 5, 2019 in Singapore. He was 92.
Clearing the air on cilia development
24 May 2019A*STAR researchers have uncovered the sequence of genetic events behind the development of motile cilia in airways.
Sydney Brenner’s 10-on-10: a take on evolution through the aeons
21 Feb 2019A new book spans 14 billion years of evolution and explores humanity’s place in time.
Classify and conquer
12 Dec 2017Molecular dissection of bile duct cancer reveals subtypes with different origins and varying potential treatments
Mutation discovered for joint disorder
18 Oct 2017A
rare genetic mutation associated with a developmental disorder could be a treatment
target for related conditions in adults
Mutation found in patients without a nose
14 Sep 2017Researchers
discover a master regulator of nose development
An inflammatory gene
16 May 2017Genetic malfunction causes
hyperactive inflammation and cancer susceptibility
Facing off a deadly mutation
15 Nov 2016A gene mutation that makes the body turn life-saving immune cells into a rare and dangerous cancer has been identified for the first time