Furthermore, the small number of
published gene sequences limits the accuracy of the identification methods.
Not exact matches
In 1972 he and his team were the first to
publish the nucleotide
sequence of a complete
gene.
Data
published by the International Human Genome
Sequencing Consortium indicate that somewhere between 113 and 223
genes present in bacteria and in the human genome are absent in well - studied organisms — such as the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster and the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans — that lie in between those two evolutionary extremes.
We elucidated the nucleotide
sequence of a
gene, and this was
published in 1972.
In tomorrow's issue of Nature, a team of scientists from The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) in Rockville, Maryland, will
publish the complete genetic
sequence of the bacterium Helicobacter pylori, spelling out the precise molecular composition of the organism's
genes.
A new study
published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics has established that hybrid - capture
sequencing is the method of choice for
sequencing «actionable»
gene mutations across the most common forms of lymphoid cancer.
The researchers from Queen Mary University of London
sequenced the HAS2
gene in thirteen similar or related mammals, combining the data with DNA
sequences extracted from 57
published genomes representing all the major mammal groups.
Then, just two months later, Venter and his collaborators contributed partial
sequences of nearly 30,000 human
genes to a 379 - page atlas of the human genome
published by the journal Nature.
The scientists started with the genome of a domestic cat — a female Abyssinian — that had been
published in draft form in 2007, then filled in missing
sequences and identified
genes.
Publishing their findings in the open - access journal Nature Communications, the researchers discovered DNA
sequences for «control dials» that consistently produce very high levels of
gene activity.
The first study to
sequence and analyze the entire genome of a HeLa cell line, along with access to its
sequence data, has been
published Aug. 7 in its final version, by G3:
Genes Genomes Genetics, an open - access, scientific journal of the Genetics Society of America.
As Wroblewski, Parham, and co-authors explain in a PLOS Biology study
published online today, they analyzed stool samples dating back 15 years and
sequenced immune system
genes from 125 chimpanzees.
In a separate study which is not yet
published, this team with Professor Steve Rozen, from the NBD Programme at Duke - NUS, identified many new mutations in the PCM1
gene from ASD patients from next - generation
sequencing.
«Oil palm genome
sequence reveals divergence of interfertile species in Old and New worlds» and «The oil palm SHELL
gene controls oil yield and encodes a homologue of SEEDSTICK» will be
published online ahead of print in Nature on Wednesday, July 24, 2013.
Our guest
published a historic paper less than one month ago (available here), describing the first comprehensive study of an individual, combining genomic (genome
sequence), transcriptomic (
genes turned on / off), proteomic (the total complement of proteins - or protein profiles), metabolomic (complete metabolic analysis), and autoantibody profiles.
The paper, entitled «
Sequence Variants in the RNF212
Gene Associate with Genomewide Recombination Rate,» is
published today in the online edition of Science, at www.sciencemag.org/sciencexpress.
Previous studies have
published bay scallop expressed
sequence tags [23, 24] and transcriptome
sequences [17], which provided valuable resources for
gene cloning.
«There could be labs out there who have already
sequenced a similar
gene and the protein associated with it and worked on its function, but haven't
published yet,» he said.
In yeast, the
published genomic
sequences show that at least 14 % of its 5800
genes are clear duplicates.
We will be able to include the identification of these
genes on the annotated
sequence when it is
published.
Sequences for 54 nuclear genes were taken from Perelman et al.'s [12] nexus file with modifications to eliminate problems with probable contaminants and misidentified sequences (Table S2); sequences for 15 additional nuclear genes (ABO, CXCR4, CXCR5, Epsilon globin, FGA, IRBP intron 1, IRBP intron 3, MC1R, NRAMP, PRNP, VWF intron 11) were obtained from GenBank; and new sequences (JX856181 - JX856283, JX869897 - JX869930) for exons of four nuclear genes (GHR, IRBP, VWF, TTN) were combined with previously published GenBank sequences for th
Sequences for 54 nuclear
genes were taken from Perelman et al.'s [12] nexus file with modifications to eliminate problems with probable contaminants and misidentified
sequences (Table S2); sequences for 15 additional nuclear genes (ABO, CXCR4, CXCR5, Epsilon globin, FGA, IRBP intron 1, IRBP intron 3, MC1R, NRAMP, PRNP, VWF intron 11) were obtained from GenBank; and new sequences (JX856181 - JX856283, JX869897 - JX869930) for exons of four nuclear genes (GHR, IRBP, VWF, TTN) were combined with previously published GenBank sequences for th
sequences (Table S2);
sequences for 15 additional nuclear genes (ABO, CXCR4, CXCR5, Epsilon globin, FGA, IRBP intron 1, IRBP intron 3, MC1R, NRAMP, PRNP, VWF intron 11) were obtained from GenBank; and new sequences (JX856181 - JX856283, JX869897 - JX869930) for exons of four nuclear genes (GHR, IRBP, VWF, TTN) were combined with previously published GenBank sequences for th
sequences for 15 additional nuclear
genes (ABO, CXCR4, CXCR5, Epsilon globin, FGA, IRBP intron 1, IRBP intron 3, MC1R, NRAMP, PRNP, VWF intron 11) were obtained from GenBank; and new
sequences (JX856181 - JX856283, JX869897 - JX869930) for exons of four nuclear genes (GHR, IRBP, VWF, TTN) were combined with previously published GenBank sequences for th
sequences (JX856181 - JX856283, JX869897 - JX869930) for exons of four nuclear
genes (GHR, IRBP, VWF, TTN) were combined with previously
published GenBank
sequences for th
sequences for these loci.
Five to 10 years ago, the
sequencing of a single
gene was often sufficient to get a scientist's work
published in a prestigious journal.
The new study,
published in Nature, traced the
sequence of
gene handoffs among swine and birds that resulted in the virus that is circulating now in humans.