For a few years now, my EvoSTAR colleague, Bill Langdon, has been exploring the degree to which Mycoplasma bacteria have contaminated experimental systems and even "infected" online databases with the contents of their genomes.
For a few years now, my EvoSTAR colleague, Bill Langdon, has been exploring the degree to which Mycoplasma bacteria have contaminated experimental systems and even "infected" online databases with the contents of their genomes.
Check out this paper in PNAS and the corresponding synopsis in the New York Times. The authors take a unique approach to finding genes likely to be associated with human traits using orthologous phenotypes in model organisms, or phenologs. The idea is simple. The authors have a database of ~2000 disease associated genes in humans.
A District Court handed down a summary judgment invalidating most of Myriad's claims to both the BRCA1 DNA sequence and the method of testing for early-onset familial breast and ovarian cancer. See Genetic Future and Genomics Law Report for analysis.Getting Genetics Done by Stephen Turner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) License.
Just caught this on the OpenHelix Blog. In an interview with Charlie Rose, NIH director Francis Collins said Computational biologists will be the "breakthrough" artists of the future. Getting Genetics Done by Stephen Turner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) License.
The New York Times had an interesting piece yesterday about how SAS is facing several business threats from companies like the recently IBM-acquired SPSS, and from burgeoning interest in open-source software like R.
http://www.harvardscience.harvard.edu/blog/how-dachshund-lost-its-legsGetting Genetics Done by Stephen Turner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) License.
While not directly related to genetics, this is an excellent example of well-designed data representation. The New York Times reports the results of a survey of average time spent on various activities through the day by different groups of people. The graphic is essentially a stacked density plot with time (24 hours) on the X-axis.
Logan recently emailed me an article in the New York Times about single-molecule DNA sequencing and I realized I knew next to nothing about the new and emerging technology that will change the way we do association studies (that is, if we're still even trying to find genetic associations in the first place). The Wellcome Trust posted a news feature a few weeks back giving brief explanations and short videos on DNA sequencing, starting with the
That's the title of a good article published yesterday in the New York Times about the emergence of statistics being in huge demand in the career market, becoming "the sexy job in the next 10 years" as Google's chief economist puts it. Now I just need to find one of these don't drink and derive t-shirts...For Today’s Graduate, Just One Word: StatisticsGetting Genetics Done by Stephen Turner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC
Last week personal genomics giant 23andMe launched Research Revolution, a new project aiming to recruit 1000 study participants for each of ten complex diseases, including Migraines, Psoriasis, several cancers, and autoimmune diseases.