DNA and Genes #
- DNA discovery, extraction and structure. A critical review
- The DNA Paradox: How Unseen Molecules Became Unquestioned Facts
- Why the human genome was never completed
- The new understanding of DNA that removes the idea of genes
- An update on my research into the DNA
- Genetics: Genome in Dissolution – ‘…25 geneticists sat down at the University of California at Berkeley to answer this seemingly simple question: What is a gene? However, the attempt to define the basic concept of their field precisely proved to be extremely difficult. The expert meeting almost ended in disaster, recalls Karen Eilbeck, Professor of Human Genetics at Berkeley and host of the round table: “We had meetings for hours. Everyone was screaming at everyone else.”‘
- The DNA delusion – “Therefore, nucleic acid cannot possibly contain our inheritance! Ideas such as epigenetics (the theory of flexible heredity) are only desperate attempts to somehow justify and keep alive the old model of a material heredity in the form of genes.” – Stefan Lanka
- A Look at the Human Genome Project 10/9/24
- DNA: the Double Helix or the Ribbon Helix?
- Look into the work of Barbara McClintock
DNA is different in different parts of the body #
- Surprising science: Not all our cells have the same DNA
- DNA Not The Same In Every Cell Of Body: Major Genetic Differences Between Blood And Tissue Cells Revealed
DNA Tests #
- A critical review of DNA testing
- How DNA Testing Botched My Family’s Heritage, and Probably Yours, Too
- How Accurate Are Online DNA Tests?
- At-home DNA tests just aren’t that reliable – and the risks may outweigh the benefits
- Report: A DNA Testing Company Could Not Tell the Difference Between Human and Dog DNA
- Home DNA Kits: What Do They Tell You?
- I Tried a Bunch of DNA Tests and All I Got Was a Bunch of Useless Data
- Dog DNA Company Insists Human DNA Is Actually Alaskan Malamute
- How accurate are dog DNA tests? We unleash the truth
MTHFR #
“Due to the large, varied and often conflicting data reported on MTHFR, these polymorphisms have been weakly associated with multiple conditions, including autism, schizophrenia, cardiac disease, fetal neural tube defects, poor pregnancy outcomes and colorectal cancer.”
MTHFR genetic testing: Controversy and clinical implications