national-cancer-institute-L7en7Lb-Ovc-unsplash Type post Author Casey Luskin Date August 5, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , ankylosing spondylitis, autism, cancer, Crohn’s disease, disease, Dr. Dan, env, function, gag, genes, illness, intelligent design, junk DNA, LINE-1 elements, mutations, non-coding DNA, pol, schizophrenia, Stanford University, transcriptome Disease-Associated “Junk” DNA Is Evidence of Function Casey Luskin August 5, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Medicine 11 When you mess with the “junk,” the result is problems. That doesn’t sound like junk DNA to me. Read More ›
DNA Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date May 13, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Casey Luskin, Daniel Stern Cardinale, debates, DNA, dog, Dr. Dan, embryogenesis, embryonic stem cells, enzymes, euchromatin, evolution, function, genome, Genome Biology, humans, intelligent design, junk DNA, LINE-1 elements, macaque, methylation, miRNAs, mouse, Nature (journal), non-coding RNAs, peer-reviewed literature, repetitive elements, Rutgers University, Science (journal), transposable elements From the “Junk DNA” Files: Can “Degraded” LINE Elements Still Be Functional? Jonathan McLatchie, Richard Sternberg, and Casey Luskin May 13, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 22 On May 2, Casey Luskin had an online debate with Professor Daniel Stern Cardinale, an evolutionary biologist at Rutgers University. Read More ›