cheapbag214s
Joined: 27 Jun 2013
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Posted: Sat 12:18, 27 Jul 2013 Post subject: We've showed that in primates |
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just the "exons." But when people use viruses to do gene therapy, they do the intron cutting step beforehand. So, the compact DNA sequence that gets loaded into the vector is shorter than the version that's in the cells of your body. Snyder and his team latch on to that difference to sort out naturally occurring DNA (endogenous) from the DNA they've injected (exogenous). "We've showed that in primates, if we inject them into the muscle, we can still detect the sequences in their blood months after the injection,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych]," Snyder said. They hope to transform this science into an actual working detection system by 2016. "Our primary focus is to develop technology that can be utilized on a wide scale for the direct purposes of screening athletes," he said. "Our push is to try to get them out for the next Olympics." Which might be when this issue really breaks into the mainstream doping conversation. All those hormones that people directly inject? Hypothetically, at least,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], it would be
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