Results
… through end-to-end automation — and further advancing sequence applications, single cell genomics, biodesign, and … [QA/QC]), large-scale liquid handling automation, and sequence analysis. … access to cutting-edge cell sorting, DNA amplification, and sequence analysis to recover the genomes of uncultivated …
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… When submitting sequences to the JGI DNA Synthesis program, please include … Sequence files for all constructs should be emailed to … several easy-to-use open source tools for converting DNA sequence files into well-formed GenBank files. ApE is an …
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… at JGI start with sequencing, but where else did those sequences go? Like, what are the other scientific tools we … that describe the work. In general. Scientific merit and why it’s important. The DOE mission is one of these … that’s not necessarily the case. You’re not going to have a greater chance of getting approved because you requested …
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… DAN: Alright, so I think we’ve covered a little bit about why they’re important. But one of the things I did want to … live in the root nodules of plants. And these guys were sequenced, and you can see that different Frankia have … an antibiotic, the more a bacterium is exposed to it, the greater the chance that that bacterium is going to evolve …
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… pipelines. You will receive automated emails as raw sequence data becomes available, and as analysis is …
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… in doing so enabled the JGI to be the first to publish the sequence analysis of the target chromosomes 5, 16, and 19, …
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… sequencing products below. In addition, JGI will submit raw sequence data to SRA at NCBI once the standard analysis is … in length, cloned into vector of choice Glycerol stock of sequence verified clone 102/NA DNA Synthesis Constructs … in length, cloned into vector of choice Glycerol stock of sequence verified clone 170/NA DNA Synthesis Constructs …
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… Plant Flagship genomes into pangenomes, which capture much greater diversity for these species. The pangenomes enable … manipulation in the laboratory. Both germplasm (sequenced mutants and natural accessions) and protocols …
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… there are any kind of dated references to the news, that’s why. But it was a really fun conversation. And I think … metabolites evolve– who makes them, how do they spread, why do they spread in a certain way from one bacteria to … it would work, but we actually found fosmids. And we sequenced the whole fosmid at the time with Sanger …
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… For sequencing projects, once work is under way, raw sequence data is released to NCBI’s Sequence Read Archive on a regular basis, in accordance with …
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… enzymes are, right? ALISON NARAYAN: Yes, and so that’s why I don’t like that sentence. I think that sometimes, we … association that might help? Like, if you have an unknown sequence or new flavin monooxygenases, you could say, oh … DAN UDWARY: That’s weird. I hadn’t heard that before. Why is that? Why would that be the case? ALISON NARAYAN: …
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… least, talk to us, first about my definitions of things and why I am wrong, and also talk about some of the great … think the terms we should be using for what we do are, and why there and why it’s important to make those distinctions. … to approach it is more related to what JGI does, which is sequence genomes. And we just published last year in the …
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