Genomics Sample Articles & Analysis
6 articles found
The Type II restriction endonuclease HindII (from Haemophilus influenzae Rd) remains a versatile molecular tool despite being one of the earliest restriction enzymes characterized. While many researchers now default to enzymes with longer recognition sequences for routine cloning, HindII enzyme activity characteristics provide distinct advantages in specialized applications including methylation ...
The Type II restriction endonuclease HindII (from Haemophilus influenzae Rd) remains a versatile molecular tool despite being one of the earliest restriction enzymes characterized. While many researchers now default to enzymes with longer recognition sequences for routine cloning, HindII enzyme activity characteristics provide distinct advantages in specialized applications including methylation ...
Overview of Microbial Eukaryotes Living organisms are categorized based on various characteristics, and one classification system revolves around their cellular components, structure, and function. Consequently, organisms, including microorganisms, can be classified as either eukaryotes or prokaryotes. The primary distinction between the two lies in the presence of membrane-bound organelles, ...
Whole genome sequencing (WGS) has the capacity to greatly enhance genomic knowledge and understand mysteries of life by utilizing the most advanced genetic sequencing technologies. WGS can be used for variant calling, genome annotation, phylogenetic analysis, reference genome construction, and more. WGS tries to cover the whole genome, but actually covers 95% of the genome with technical ...
The Use of Microbiome Sequencing in Cancer Research A growing body of evidence now suggests that human microbial dysbiosis has a crucial role in cancer development and progression. Unlike earlier studies relying on culturing bacteria from the tissue of cancer, high-throughput sequencing methods have enabled genotyping the microbial ecosystem within cancer tissue from hundreds to thousands of ...
Mosaic allows users to add as much genomic data (CRAM, BAM, VCF) as they want to their Mosaic projects. This is true for paid accounts but surprisingly this is also true for free accounts (if you haven't already you can sign up and go crazy right now). As far as I'm aware, we are the only genomic cloud platform that offers this or perhaps more accurately can offer this. We are able to do this ...
