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Suicide mosquitos may prevent the spread of Zika virus


Suicide mosquitos may prevent the spread of Zika virus
In 2016, the World Health Organization called the Zika virus epidemic a public health emergency of international concern due to the virus causing birth defects for pregnant women in addition to neurological problems. Since then, researchers have wrestled with different strategies for controlling the spread of Zika virus, which gets transmitted to humans from female mosquito bites.
One approach, which was approved by the Environmental Protection Agency in May, will release more than 750 million genetically modified mosquitos into the Florida Keys in 2021 and 2022. These suicide mosquitos are genetically-altered to produce offspring that die before emerging into adults and therefore cannot bite humans and spread disease. ....

Alexander Franz , Emily Henderson , University Of Missouri , Colorado State University , Mu College Of Veterinary Medicine , World Health Organization , Environmental Protection Agency , Florida Keys , Veterinary Medicine , Associate Professor , Zika Virus , Birth Defects , Public Health , அலெக்சாண்டர் ஃப்ரான்ஸ் , எமிலி ஹென்டர்சன் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் மிச Ou ரி , கொலராடோ நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மு கல்லூரி ஆஃப் கால்நடை மருந்து , உலகம் ஆரோக்கியம் ஆர்கநைஸேஶந் , புளோரிடா விசைகள் , கால்நடை மருந்து , இணை ப்ரொஃபெஸர் , ஜிக வைரஸ் , பிறப்பு குறைபாடுகள் , பொது ஆரோக்கியம் ,

Researchers develop new computational method for studying genetic and environmental interactions


Researchers develop new computational method for studying genetic and environmental interactions
Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and Cornell University s Ithaca campus have developed a new computational method for studying genetic and environmental interactions and how they influence disease risk.
The research, published Jan. 7 in
The American Journal of Human Genetics, makes the process of finding these interactions much less difficult and demonstrates their importance in determining body mass index and diabetes risk.
Our study demonstrates that your genes matter and the environment matters and that the interaction of the two can increase risk for disease, said co-senior author, Dr. Olivier Elemento, who is professor of computational genomics in computational biomedicine, professor of physiology and biophysics, associate director of the HRH Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud Institute for Computational Biomedicine, and director of the Caryl an ....

New York , United States , Cornell University , Andrew Clark , Jacob Gould Schurman , Olivier Elemento , Emily Henderson , Andrew Marderstein , Department Of Molecular Biology , College Of Arts Sciences , Cornell University Ithaca , Peter Meinig Family Investigator At Cornell University , Weill Cornell Graduate School Of Medical Sciences , School Of Medical Sciences , Weill Cornell Medicine , American Journal , Human Genetics , Computational Biomedicine , Israel Englander Institute , Precision Medicine , Weill Cornell , Weill Cornell Graduate School , Medical Sciences , New York City , Jacob Gould Schurman Professor , Population Genetics ,