Researchers Dig through Cell 'Trash' and Find Treasure

A person's trash can reveal valuable information, as detectives, historians and identity thieves well know. Likewise, a cell's trash may yield certain treasures, University of Delaware researchers have found.

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A person's trash can reveal valuable information, as detectives, historians and identity thieves well know. Likewise, a cell's “trash” may yield certain treasures, University of Delaware researchers have found.
Using a new technique they developed, scientists at UD’s Delaware Biotechnology Institute analyzed the cellular waste of one of the world's most-studied plants and discovered formerly hidden relationships between genes and the small molecules that can turn them off.
The approach, devised by postdoctoral researcher Marcelo German, with Pamela Green, the Crawford H. Greenewalt Endowed Chair in Plant Molecular Biology, and Blake Meyers, associate professor of plant and soil sciences, and their research teams, is reported in the scientific journal Nature Biotechnology
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