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GENETICS and G3 welcome new Senior and Associate Editors
Welcome to our newest editors! Guilherme da Silva Pereira, Li-Lin Du, Jullian Catchen, and Dan Bergstralh join G3 as Associate Editors; Leo Parts and Athma Pai join GENETICS as Associate Editors; and Joanna Masel joins GENETICS as a Senior Editor.
Community Voices
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How Drosophila can help health science labs do more with less in Brazil
In Brazil, the FlyPower group has been promoting and advocating for biomedical Drosophila research in diverse ways, and shown that fly culture can be up to seven times cheaper than mammalian cell culture.
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When U.S. scientific research isn’t funded, the economy takes a hit
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Policy changes are closing the door on the “American Dream”
Policy & Advocacy
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How policy changes are driving top researchers abroad and what that means for the U.S.
The U.S. has long been a global leader in science, but that position is at risk. As research funding drops and political pressures rise, scientists, particularly in academia and research institutes, are at a crossroads—what will happen to their labs and their research? Innovation is slowing, and the next generation of researchers is being driven out. Without renewed support, the future of American science and the benefits it brings to our nation could be lost.
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A Call to Action: Learn what you can do now to protect science
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Letter from the GSA President on recent developments arising from the U.S. Presidential administration
Science & Publishing
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Near-perfect genome editing in a deadly fungus
C. neoformans researchers introduce a toolkit that simplifies CRISPR editing—with HDR rates rarely seen in fungal systems.
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A first of its kind C. elegans study uncovers the diversity and evolution of gene regulation
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Genes in context: How lifestyle and socioeconomic conditions shape the genetics of complex traits
From the Archives
Cold-loving fungi fight frostbite, but can’t take the heat
To the unaided eye, Antarctic soil and alpine glaciers may appear to be barren wastelands devoid of life. But some microbes call hostile habitats like these home. Research on one such organism, published in the latest issue of G3, reveals some of the mechanisms behind cold adaptation—and explains why these otherwise hardy creatures can’t survive…