• Before a tree, or phylogeny, can be determined, DNA and protein sequence data must be organized. (sciencedaily.com)
  • HOVERGEN is particularly useful for: - comparative sequence analysis - phylogeny - molecular evolution studies More generaly, HOVERGEN gives an overall view of what is known about a particular gene family. (bio.net)
  • This essay will outline the contributions made by DNA sequencing data to plant phylogeny and its limitations. (nmmra.org)
  • DNA sequencing provided a high resolution, reliable method for the construction of phylogeny. (nmmra.org)
  • The problem, both in terms of comparative anatomy and biochemistry, is that an unprejudiced view of the data suggests we didn't evolve from fish. (uncommondescent.com)
  • Dr. Matzinger received a BA in Biophysics, Biochemistry, and Molecular Biology from Whitman College and her doctorate in Microbiology from the University of California, Davis. (cdc.gov)
  • Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. (cdc.gov)
  • Sequence data were deposited in the European Molecular Biology Laboratory European Bioinformatics Institute (project code PRJEB24962 ). (nature.com)
  • He holds a PhD in biomedical sciences with experience in molecular biology, next-generation sequencing techniques, computational biology and bioinformatics approaches. (qiagen.com)
  • Dr. Jonathan Jacobs leads ATCC's Sequencing & Bioinformatics Center and the development of the ATCC Genome Portal. (qiagen.com)
  • He has over 20 years of experience in molecular genetics, bioinformatics and microbial genomics, and he has worked throughout his career at the interface of academia, government and industry. (qiagen.com)
  • PGEToolbox is open-sourced, can be easily extended or tailored for specific tasks, and scaled up for large data sets.For academic uses, PGEToolbox is available free of charge at http://bioinformatics.org/pgetoolbox/ . (stanford.edu)
  • This year three University of Oregon (UO) graduate students headed to Stowers to learn how to apply computer analysis to molecular genetics, a booming discipline known as bioinformatics. (stowers.org)
  • Burns, who majored in biology at UO, admits she was a complete novice in bioinformatics when she started the program. (stowers.org)
  • He may be right: Woodfin, Burns, and Dannebaum officially received master's degrees in biology with an emphasis in bioinformatics this September, and each will remain at Stowers for a while as analysts. (stowers.org)
  • The Road to Metagenomics: From Microbiology to DNA Sequencing Technologies and Bioinformatics. (cdc.gov)
  • The aim of the course is that the students acquire a general understanding of several major bioinformatics concepts and tools commonly used in biology and molecular biology and obtain training in designing and executing bioinformatics procedures aimed at answering scientific questions within various fields of biology. (lu.se)
  • The course gives an overview of the most commonly used applied bioinformatics methods within the fields of biology and molecular biology. (lu.se)
  • We are looking for an image analysis interested bioinformatics student to help us develop our software workflows for our novel molecular profiling optical platform. (lu.se)
  • My role in the group, is to bridge the wet and dry lab, working both with molecular biology and bioinformatics. (lu.se)
  • My education at Lund University have given me a broad and solid foundation in both molecular biology and bioinformatics, allowing me to freely travel between the fields and combining them in my research. (lu.se)
  • This material demonstrates how whole genome sequencing can be used to detect SARS-CoV-2 variants and inform public health response. (cdc.gov)
  • Thanks to the advancement of sequencing technology, the plastid genome and the whole genome were sequenced in some durian cultivars. (who.int)
  • The course is offered at the Department of Biology, Lund University. (lu.se)
  • The Graduate Research School of Integrative Biology (IBIO) courses are held at the biology and chemistry departments at Lund University and are generally between one to four days in length. (lu.se)
  • Those clever weasels figured out methods to project whatever evolutionary story they want onto the data with fancy sounding methods like: Maximum Likelihood Phylogenetics and Baysian Evolutionary Analysis. (uncommondescent.com)
  • Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution Volume 190, January 2024, 107960. (montgomerybotanical.org)
  • PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -With a new five-year, $11.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, Brown University will expand its research in computational biology and launch a new Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE), which will support five early career faculty members as they tackle the genomics underlying diseases such as cancer, preeclampsia and severe lung infections. (brown.edu)
  • Brown scientists and students from a number of departments around the University - from computer science and applied mathematics to biology, medicine and public health - have been working collaboratively to understand and realize the benefits of advanced genomics," said Savitz, who is also a professor in the School of Public Health. (brown.edu)
  • CCMB researchers have developed innovative methods to analyze complex genomics data sets. (brown.edu)
  • a leader in the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) consortium, has spearheaded an effort to make phenotypic data accessible and computable across platforms. (jax.org)
  • Stowers genomics scientist Marco Blanchette, PhD, who interviewed the interns in Eugene, says the demand for biologists proficient in data analysis has skyrocketed due to next-generation sequencing technology, which allows analyses of entire genomes. (stowers.org)
  • Reference-free population genomics from next-generation transcriptome data and the vertebrate-invertebrate gap. (who.int)
  • Tsagkogeorga G, Cahais V, Galtier N. The population genomics of a fast evolver: high levels of diversity, functional constraint, and molecular adaptation in the tunicate Ciona intestinalis. (who.int)
  • We compared the sequences of two housekeeping genes ( hspA and glmM ) from these clones with those of 131 unrelated strains from patients living in different geographic regions. (cdc.gov)
  • Clonal descent has been demonstrated by comparing alleles of genes such as vacA , flaA , and flaB of isolates infecting members of the same family ( 10 - 12 ) and by sequencing three housekeeping genes ( ureI , atpA , and ahpC ) ( 13 ). (cdc.gov)
  • Analysis of the sequences of housekeeping genes ( atpD , scoB , glnA and recA ) showed that strains cluster according to their geographic origins ( 15 , 20 ). (cdc.gov)
  • To assess the genetic diversity and relationships between the isolates, we sequenced two housekeeping genes ( glmM and hspA ). (cdc.gov)
  • X-exome sequencing of 405 unresolved families identifies seven novel intellectual disability genes. (mpg.de)
  • ANNOUNCEMENT ================================================================================ HOVERGEN Homologous Vertebrate Genes Data Base Release 6 (May 9 1994) from GenBank Release 82 (April 15 1994) ================================================================================ The new release is available by anonymous FTP at biom3.univ-lyon1.fr (134.214.100.42) in the directory /pub/hovergen HOVERGEN is a database of homologous vertebrate genes. (bio.net)
  • Users have directly access to all information attached to sequences (either from GenBank or specific of HOVERGEN), or multiple alignments simply by clicking on genes. (bio.net)
  • This graphical tool gives thus a rapid and simple access to all data necessary to interpret homology relationships between genes: phylogenetic trees of gene families, taxonomy, GenBank information and protein multiple alignments. (bio.net)
  • A common approach to the mutational screening of candidate genes consists of sequencing their exons and immediate intron boundaries. (molvis.org)
  • However, since pathogenic mutations can sometimes be located deep within introns, as was recently shown for retinal degeneration genes as well [ 7 , 8 ], we decided to analyze the full MDH1 sequence. (molvis.org)
  • The data revealed reliable data on the structure and function of several genes. (who.int)
  • This study also presents data confirming that the expression of mucin-specific genes occurs at a very early time-point following endotoxin exposure, and in the absence of neutrophils. (cdc.gov)
  • This is a major step forward for evolutionary biology. (sciencedaily.com)
  • There's data and then there's information," said David Rand, director of the new center and chair of the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB). (brown.edu)
  • For example, Sohini Ramachandran, Manning Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, has developed analyses to discover how humans have diversified throughout history as they migrated out of Africa to the rest of the world. (brown.edu)
  • Software and Databases for Molecular Evolutionary Biology. (who.int)
  • Several downstream analyses are performed and their utility in applied ecology, evolutionary biology and molecular biology research will be discussed with guest lecturers. (lu.se)
  • These data indicate no evidence for the effects of a domestication bottleneck, but instead reveal a steady decline in genetic diversity over time coupled with an accumulating mutation load. (nature.com)
  • After the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequence of the human genome was completed in 2003, the reference sequence underwent several improvements and today provides the underlying comparative resource for a multitude genetic assays and biochemical measurements. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Genetic analysis is error prone and the data require validation because the methods for collecting DNA sequences create artifacts and the reference sequence used for comparative analyses is incomplete. (scienceblogs.com)
  • CDC is using this Next Generation-Sequencing (NGS) technology to monitor genetic changes in influenza viruses in order to better understand and improve the effectiveness of influenza vaccines. (cdc.gov)
  • Scientists are looking at the genetic sequences of 10 generations of H3N2 flu viruses as they grow and evolve in eggs. (cdc.gov)
  • Therefore, molecular biology is a powerful tool to approach and explore the genetic characteristics of durians. (who.int)
  • The molecular data and relative distribution of these species in relation to their vectorial capacity and the epidemiology of malaria in the region are discussed. (who.int)
  • As pathogens continue to evolve in response to interaction with their hosts, gathering a more complete picture through paired epidemiology and genomic sequencing data will help to better understand this interaction and lead to even swifter responses to events of public health concern. (cdc.gov)
  • Integrating molecular epidemiology and social network analysis to study infectious diseases: towards a socio-molecular era for public health. (cdc.gov)
  • AMD technology uses genomic sequencing, high-performance computing, and epidemiology to study pathogens and improve disease detection. (cdc.gov)
  • Exome sequencing identifies recurrent mutations of the splicing factor SF3B1 gene in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. (mpg.de)
  • Thus they are free to mutate at a higher rate than coding sequences - mutations will not mess up protein production- and they frequently vary in length and thus reveal relationships among organisms. (osu.edu)
  • Therefore, we reasoned that MDH1 could correspond to the RP28 locus, and mutations in its sequence could be responsible for the disease in a manner similar to that of pathogenic changes in IDH3B . (molvis.org)
  • We are currently using AMD techniques to sequence all clinical specimens that come into the CDC to improve our ability to find and track mutations that may be of concern. (cdc.gov)
  • Although these mutations result in phenotypic resistance to echinocandins in planktonic cells, there is little data on antifungal susceptibilities of CAS-R C. albicans strains within biofilms. (who.int)
  • In Kuwait, no precise data are the only exons where mutations have been available, although some reports have been previously reported [ 5 ]. (who.int)
  • Modeling read counts for CNV detection in exome sequencing data. (mpg.de)
  • It also provides the foundation for additional software development to facilitate genomic data analysis in the context of clinical information to accelerate innovation and discovery. (jax.org)
  • Phylodynamics with Migration: A Computational Framework to Quantify Population Structure from Genomic Data. (cdc.gov)
  • Humans have been mapping the world for several millennia, but genomes have been mapped and explored for just a single century with the greatest advancements in making a sequence reference map of the human genome possible in the past 30 years. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The first human genome sequencing project cost $2.7 billion and was declared complete in 2003, after 15 years of international cooperation and collaboration between several research teams and funding agencies. (jove.com)
  • Today, with the advent of next-generation sequencing technologies, the cost and time of sequencing a human genome have dropped over 100 fold. (jove.com)
  • Despite the intrinsic complexity of human genome sequences, reads were easily mapped and analyzed, and all algorithms used provided the same results. (molvis.org)
  • Among the unigenes, 94.1% encoded products that were most similar in amino acid sequence to Arabidopsis and 1.5% had no match with a member of the family Brassicaceae. (mcmaster.ca)
  • As part of our consulting activities at Digital World Biology, we engage in market analyses for groups developing biotechnology businesses. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Brown University will launch a Center for Biomedical Research Excellence in Computational Biology of Human Disease to expand its research using sophisticated computer analyses to understand and fight human diseases. (brown.edu)
  • However, few functions are freely available in Matlab to perform the sequence data analyses specifically required for molecular biology and evolution. (stanford.edu)
  • The main purpose of the CKQ questionnaire was to collect data on factors which may cause transient elevations in CPK (a history of recent injury or heavy physical exertion) so that data analysts can account for such cases in their analyses of the relationship of CPK to health conditions. (cdc.gov)
  • The science of figuring out these trees, known as systematics, has progressed significantly in the last two decades largely due to advances in computation, genetics and molecular biology. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Computer scientist Tandy Warnow, biologist Randy Linder and their graduate students have created an automated computing method, called SATé, that can analyze these molecular data from thousands of organisms, simultaneously figuring out how the sequences should be organized and computing their evolutionary relatedness in as little as 24 hours. (sciencedaily.com)
  • In addition, SATé can accurately analyze DNA sequences that are rapidly evolving. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Moreover, it provides an extensible, functional framework for users with more specialized requirements to explore and analyze aligned nucleotide or protein sequences from an evolutionary perspective. (stanford.edu)
  • But I hadn't met many PhD students who knew how to analyze their own data," she says. (stowers.org)
  • If I were to pursue a PhD or a career in biology, I would want to know how to analyze my own data. (stowers.org)
  • CDC is using next-generation gene sequencing tools to analyze flu viruses as part of CDC's Advanced Molecular Detection (AMD) initiative. (cdc.gov)
  • When confronted with the task of finding homology to large numbers of sequences, database searching tools such as Blast and Fasta generate prohibitively large amounts of information. (aaai.org)
  • Areas covered include sequence databases, pairwise and multiple sequence alignment, homology searches in sequence databases and subcellular localization prediction. (lu.se)
  • For decades, structural biologists have been working on cracking the molecular 3D structures of proteins to understand their function. (phys.org)
  • Microsatellites are short sequence repeats in the nuclear genome that do not produce proteins. (osu.edu)
  • Heterologous gene expression confirmed that proteins from the ISC and CDP-DAG pathways retain mitochondrial targeting sequences that are recognized by yeast mitochondria. (lu.se)
  • Previous work in this area has been on modeling the assembly structure of the type III secretion system and prediction of the high-resolution structures of homo-oligomeric proteins using limited experimental data from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) in order to speed up the process of structure determination. (lu.se)
  • Mathematical members will be responsible for implementing clustering algorithms to quantify bristle pattern data and detect pattern differences. (clarkson.edu)
  • The objective of the program is to organize or integrate groups involved in research on algorithms, computational modeling and data infrastructure with teams of scientists working in other fields of knowledge, such as biology, social sciences, medicine and the humanities. (fapesp.br)
  • While retaining all capabilities of a forward simulation, SLiM utilizes sophisticated algorithms and optimized data structures that enable simulations on the scale of entire eukaryotic chromosomes in reasonably large populations. (stanford.edu)
  • This was confirmed by the high similarity (99.2%-100%) of their sequences with those available in GenBank. (who.int)
  • Some of the ESTs in this collection have low sequence similarity with those in Genbank suggesting that they may encode functions that may contribute to Thellungiella's high degree of stress tolerance when compared with Arabidopsis. (mcmaster.ca)
  • HOVERGEN corresponds to all nuclear vertebrate sequences of GenBank, with some data corrected, clarified, or completed, notably to address the problem of redundancy. (bio.net)
  • Next-generation sequencing is the collective name for a group of technologies that can facilitate the relatively rapid generation of sequence data from many different species, or from groups of individuals. (jove.com)
  • There are many Next-Generation sequencing methods, but arguably the most popular is reversible terminator sequencing. (jove.com)
  • As the world's enterprises accelerate their digital transformations, they discover that next-generation applications must deal with data that are bigger and faster at the same time, outstripping the capabilities of today's infrastructure. (iscb.org)
  • She is currently working to expand the use of next-generation sequencing (NGS) surveillance for pathogens of public health concern for the state of Colorado. (cdc.gov)
  • Assist the PI with developing molecular biology and next-generation sequencing methods for spatial genomic approaches. (latpro.com)
  • It is a next generation microscopy based technique that generate sequencing style data with spatial context and will allow spatial multi-omics of large tissue samples (human tissue biopsies), e.g. spatial transcriptomics and spatial proteomics. (lu.se)
  • Our process is novel because it rapidly and simultaneously aligns sequences and looks for the best phylogenies," says Linder, associate professor of integrative biology. (sciencedaily.com)
  • All our courses are free of charge for students enrolled in the Graduate Research School of Integrative Biology and are eligible for university credits. (lu.se)
  • The current methods for determining a DNA sequence rely on mimicking the processes used in nature to replicate DNA and copy chromosomes before cells divide. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Nanopore sequencing methods were not easy to develop. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The mission of EMBL is to train scientists at all levels, perform basic molecular biology research and to create new instruments and methods in the broad field of life science and technology development. (phys.org)
  • These data can be used for fine-scale population genetics or clinical studies, and these technologies are faster and more cost-efficient than traditional sequencing methods. (jove.com)
  • Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.). 2562 , p. 461-469 9 p. (lu.se)
  • The course will cover the theory and practice of phylogenetic inference from molecular data and introduce some of the most used methods and computer programs. (lu.se)
  • The emphasis will be on model-based methods using maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference, with a focus on DNA sequences as data. (lu.se)
  • The goal is to assign acquired spectra to known peptide sequences and potential co- and post-translational modifica- tions. (lu.se)
  • The Sequence Alignment/Map (SAM) format is a generic alignment format for storing read alignments against reference sequences, supporting short and long reads (up to 128 Mbp) produced by different sequencing platforms. (nih.gov)
  • Such a direct method for reading a sequence could be faster and more accurate than current approaches. (scienceblogs.com)
  • More generally, imperfections in preprocessed data and statistical variations in the locations of biologically meaningful features within the raw data invalidate standard attribute-based approaches. (aaai.org)
  • These approaches depend on sequence databases that are used by the engines to match real spectra to theoretical in silico spectra. (lu.se)
  • In the early 1990s, the advent of genome sequencing turned molecular biology into a "big data" science where computation became a crucial tool for life sciences research, Rand said. (brown.edu)
  • The rapid advent of genomic sequencing in both research and clinical contexts has produced accompanying progress in standardized exchange formats for sequence and variant data, such as the Variant Call Format (VCF). (jax.org)
  • With the advent of molecular biology and the availability DNA sequencing techniques, using DNA sequences to infer evolutionary and taxonomic patterns started to take hold. (nmmra.org)
  • Molecular structures and models helped scientists realize that this approach might work. (scienceblogs.com)
  • This course will cover the basics of R with a focus on basic functions, different data structures, import and export of data between R and other programs, data visualisation, functions to summarise and manipulate data, Rstudio - an integrated development environment (IDE), as well as basic statistics functions in R. You find more information and register at ClimBEco's website (external website) . (lu.se)
  • How CDC Is Using Advanced Molecular Detection Technology To Better Fight Flu! (cdc.gov)
  • Unfortunately, most phenotype data is not accessible for computation, captured in highly variable language and formats and frequently isolated in non-standardized, non-interoperable Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems. (jax.org)
  • PGEToolbox also contains functions for handling SNP (Single Nucleotide Polymorphism) genotype data. (stanford.edu)
  • H. pylori is one of the most genetically diverse bacterial species, displaying from 2.7% to 8.0% of DNA sequence polymorphism ( 14 - 16 ). (cdc.gov)
  • ABSTRACT A diagnostic polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay using species-specific primers and direct sequencing was used to identify members of the Anopheles maculipennis complex in the north-west and central regions of the Islamic Republic of Iran. (who.int)
  • It will enable the creation of much more accurate trees, especially for the Tree of Life, which deals with hundreds of thousands of gene sequences from the millions of species on Earth. (sciencedaily.com)
  • These low and high-resolution data sets originates from T3SSes from different species and can also be collected from other structurally homologous systems, such as the flagella. (lu.se)
  • In this project, biological members will work to generate in vivo confocal imaging data of the developing spot pattern, as well as generate pupae that express RNAi targeting modiers in the dorsal thorax. (clarkson.edu)
  • Now we generate billions of nucleotides of sequencing data a week. (stowers.org)
  • Our goal is to use high-resolution structural modeling techniques guided by constraints taken from lower resolution experimental data to generate structural models of important biological protein assemblies for which high resolution structural determination is unfeasible. (lu.se)
  • The current reference genome sequence is a collection of sequences, an assembly, that include sequences assembled into chromosomes, sequences that are part of structurally complex regions that cannot be assembled, patches (fixes) that cannot be included in the primary sequence, and high variability sequences that are organised into alternate loci. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Under the assumption that mutation rates are constant between two classes of genomic sequences, one can calculate the strength of fixational bias that underlies the variability in forward and reverse substitution rates. (stanford.edu)
  • For example, DNA sequencing, protein purification, and mass spectrometry are enabling technologies that are used in specific applications and thus have their own addressable target market segments. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Steven W. Norton Learning to Recognize Promoter Sequences in E. coli by Modeling Uncertainty in the Training Data Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 12 (1994) 657. (aaai.org)
  • Achievements in molecular biology, gene sequencing technology, artificial intelligence, sophisticated epidemiological models and big data have provided scientists with abundant tools for tracing the virus. (china.org.cn)
  • DNA sequences evolve through duplication and mutation and, as a result, contain many repeated sequences of different sizes, which complicates data analysis. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Analysis of gene ontology using the best matched Arabidopsis locus showed that the Thellungiella unigenes represented all biological processes and all cellular components, with the highest number of sequences attributed to the chloroplast and mitochondria. (mcmaster.ca)
  • This COBRE data analysis core will be co-directed by Associate Professors Casey Dunn from EEB and Zhijin (Jean) Wu from the Department of Biostatistics in the School of Public Health. (brown.edu)
  • Phenopackets streamline exchange and systematic use of phenotypic data and facilitate sophisticated computational analysis of both clinical and genomic information. (jax.org)
  • Increasing the amount and accessibility of computable data across systems supports better disease analysis by integrating genotype, phenotype and other data to further develop precision health. (jax.org)
  • 5 + years experience working in data analysis using SQL, excel, and BI tools, utilizing customer data. (simplyhired.com)
  • PGEToolbox is a Matlab-based software package for analysis of polymorphism and divergence data for population genetics and evolution. (stanford.edu)
  • The introduction of molecular analysis of the relationships between these major groups, in the form of DNA sequence data, has revolutionised the subject in the last twenty years. (nmmra.org)
  • This means that I have a role in the research from when we receive tissue biopsies from women with PCOS, sequencing it and performing the data analysis and drawing biological conclusions. (lu.se)
  • When scientists and engineers work with these concepts at a molecular scale, new kinds of technologies can be created to advance our understanding of the natural world. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The center will directly fund research of five teams of scientists in which younger faculty members will pursue studies related to human disease under the mentorship of two more senior professors: one with expertise in computing and mathematics and another with expertise in biology and medicine. (brown.edu)
  • PEDRO FRANZ There was a time when it was a problem for scientists to obtain data in order to move their research along. (fapesp.br)
  • One of the principal barriers we could face is communication problems among scientists on the teams needed to do science in this way, which is heavily based on data or large amounts of data. (fapesp.br)
  • At the present time, every field of research is affected by the modern scale of data production," said Mentzel, emphasizing the importance of data scientists-the name given to those professionals who pore over the enormous volume of data generated by researchers, and use it as a foundation to produce new knowledge. (fapesp.br)
  • In 1983, scientists discovered hexasomes-a unique molecular structure that helps cells package their DNA. (phys.org)
  • Experience communicating with and influencing technical and non-technical audiences (engineers, data scientists, program managers, bankers, financial advisors). (simplyhired.com)
  • In particular, the dataset available from the Irvine repository was drawn from a compilation of promoter sequences that were preprocessed to conform to the biologists' related notion of the consensus sequence, a first-order approximation with a number of shortcomings that are well-known in molecular biology. (aaai.org)
  • It estimates several basic statistics of DNA sequence variation and carries out statistical tests of selective neutrality under the infinite alleles model, such as Tajima's D test, Fu & Li's tests and Fay & Wu's H test. (stanford.edu)
  • In fact, these models and the research they inspired led to the first commercial systems for nanopore sequencing. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Rich history - The Center for Computational Molecular Biology has helped to lay the groundwork for the newly awarded Center for Biomedical Research Excellence in Computational Biology of Human Disease. (brown.edu)
  • CCMB recruited five faculty members and facilitated research and collaboration among faculty in applied mathematics (Professor Charles Lawrence), computer science (Professors Sorin Istrail and Ben Raphael), the Division of Biology and Medicine (Professors Dan Weinreich and Sohini Ramachandran). (brown.edu)
  • To date, computational biology researchers have had to develop their own in-house technical capabilities, but the COBRE will build a research core where expert staff will be able to develop and code technical implementations for the center's researchers, freeing valuable time and resources in their own labs. (brown.edu)
  • The European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) is Europe's esteemed lab network for research in molecular biology. (phys.org)
  • Research at EMBL covers the entire spectrum of research in molecular biology. (phys.org)
  • At IBM Research, we're working on creating software and AI systems that can convert reams of health data into useable information for researchers and clinicians the world over. (iscb.org)
  • Her primary research interests include host-pathogen interactions and molecular characterization of diversity and evolution of small RNA viruses. (cdc.gov)
  • Annual Research & Review in Biology. (who.int)
  • We analyse up-to-date epidemiological data of the Ebola virus disease outbreak in Nigeria as of 1 October 2014 in order to estimate the case fatality rate, the proportion of healthcare workers infected and the transmission tree. (who.int)
  • Complementary exchange standards for phenotypic and other clinical data have lagged far behind, however, in part because of the challenges noted previously. (jax.org)
  • The single-stranded DNA fragments are then loaded on a specialized chip called a flow cell that is pre-coated with short oligonucleotide sequences complementary to the adapter sequences. (jove.com)
  • This course will introduce the fundamental principles of building phylogenies using molecular data as well as the latest techniques and programs in this field. (lu.se)
  • Maybe you've scoured public databases for gene expression information on your cell line to find the reported genomic profile doesn't match the cell line data you recently purchased? (qiagen.com)
  • The matching is com- plicated by the fact that there are protein modifications and the sequence databases store the unmodified sequences. (lu.se)
  • The method's focus is to globally detect mass differences, not to assign peptide sequences or modifications to individual spectra. (lu.se)
  • We are also interested in understanding how oligomerization specificity is encoded in protein sequence and structure, in particular in coiled-coils. (lu.se)
  • PTMs from this list in conjunction with a protein sequence and a few precursor masses. (lu.se)
  • The researchers analyzed mitochondrial DNA as well as microsatellite data to reveal this new evolutionary relationship. (osu.edu)
  • For their paper, Warnow, Linder and their students tested SATé using computer-generated data and real biological data. (sciencedaily.com)
  • The biological data had been previously aligned manually by other experts. (sciencedaily.com)