Archive for the 'Bioinformatics' Category



Genome Sequencing Study Finds Clues To Unraveling The Causes Of Deadly Epidemics

A team of collaborating scientists at The Methodist Hospital Research Institute in Houston, the Broad Institute in Boston, Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, and the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion (OAHPP) have sequenced almost 100 full genomes from three successive epidemics of flesh-eating bacteria. This has resulted in the first precise explanation of [...]

Applied Biosystems Forensic DNA Kit Approved For Use By The National DNA Index System

Applied Biosystems, part of Life Technologies Corporation (NASDAQ:LIFE) announced that its AmpF STR® MiniFiler™ PCR Amplification Kit has been approved for inclusion in the National DNA Index System (NDIS), a United States Federal Bureau of Investigation database that facilitates the electronic comparison and exchange of DNA profiles between participating local, county, state, and federal law [...]

Parasitoid Wasp DNA Code Cracked, Impulse For Genetic Biology Research

Researchers of the Evolutionary Genetics Research Group of Groningen University, together with a group of international colleagues, have unravelled the DNA sequence of three closely related species of Nasonia parasitoid wasps. The parasitoid wasp genome will be published in the scientific journal Science on 15 January 2010.

Sequencing Of Wasp Genome May Help Fight Human Diseases Spread By Insects

About 100 million years ago, the bacterium Wolbachia came up with a trick that has made it one of the most successful parasites in the animal kingdom: It evolved the ability to manipulate the sex lives of its hosts.

Next-Gen Sequencing Used To Rapidly Discover Genetic Cause Of Devastating Disorder

Two scientists from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) are part of an international team that has discovered a genetic mutation that causes Joubert Syndrome. JBTS, as it is commonly called, is a devastating inherited neurological disease that is very rare in the general population but found relatively more often among Ashkenazi Jews.