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    genomic

    Explore " genomic" with insightful episodes like "Prostate Cancer Genetics and Genomics - Prostate Cancer Patient Conference 2022", "Prostate Cancer Genetics and Genomics - Prostate Cancer Patient Conference 2022", "Prostate Cancer Genetics and Genomics - Prostate Cancer Patient Conference 2022", "Prostate Cancer Genetics and Genomics - Prostate Cancer Patient Conference 2022" and "Prostate Cancer Genetics and Genomics - Prostate Cancer Patient Conference 2022" from podcasts like ""Education Issues (Video)", "Genetics (Video)", "Winning the War on Cancer (Video)", "UC San Francisco (Video)" and "Education Issues (Audio)"" and more!

    Episodes (17)

    IQYOU Health

    IQYOU Health
    Dr. Kevin Passero and his special guest Marc Isaacson will be discussing IQYOU Health. Marc Isaacson, President and CEO of Village Green Apothecary, is passionate about changing healthcare from a symptoms-based system to one that works on getting to the root cause, focusing on individualization, wellness and prevention. Over the last several years he has partnered with Dr. Joseph Pizzorno to create IQYOU, a revolutionary smart health tool, which is driven by over 30,000 medical studies. IQYOU identifies health risks by integrating assessments, lab work, DNA, as well as medications, diet, lifestyle and exercise habits, to provide people with a personalized health roadmap, empowering them to take ownership of their own health. IQYOU also creates a personalized toxin risk report and outlines detox solutions.

    Genomic science uncovers genes that enable plants to grow more with less fertilizer

    Genomic science uncovers genes that enable plants to grow more with less fertilizer
    Researchers at New York University are tackling one of the major challenges in agriculture: How to raise healthy plants while minimizing the use of fertilizer and the leaching of fertilizer chemicals into the environment. With support from the National Science Foundation, a team led by plant genomic scientist Gloria Coruzzi and computer scientist Dennis Shasha is using the latest genomic tools to develop new plant varieties that don't need as much nitrogen to grow. The researchers are also investigating which of the plant's genes control fertilizer uptake and which combinations of nitrogen, phosphate and potassium--the main nutrient chemicals in traditional commercial fertilizers--produce the heartiest plants.