« Britain on Public Health Warpath, Targets Smoking | Main | 15th Annual Report About Nation's Health Shows After Years of Progress, Overall Healthiness Slowing Dramatically, Some Areas Declining »

NIEHS to develop new RNAi library to help fight disease

The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is undertaking a $3 million, three-year effort to see how specific genes might contribute to environmentally-related disease. NIEHS will develop a new RNAi library to help fight disease through its National Center for Toxicogenomics. RNAi, or RNA interference, is a new technology which silences specific genes.
RNAi technology "turns off" specific genes so scientists can learn more about how the genes influence the cell. Knowing how a gene responds to a stress allows scientists to gain a more comprehensive understanding of how chemicals and toxins can undermine our health.

EurekAlert.com

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.lib.umn.edu/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/1798