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… pipelines. You will receive automated emails as raw sequence data becomes available, and as analysis is …
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… is also reflected in the strongly biased representation of sequenced genomes in the public domain, the bulk of which … P., Kyrpides N. C. 1,003 reference genomes of bacterial and archaeal isolates expand coverage of the tree of life.” Nat …
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… learned a lot so much history from this conversation about why the ocean was basically unexplored until the 70s, and … out, and we did not know what to do. We did not know how to culture marine isolates from the ocean. We didn’t know … forward to seeing the data when it finally gets off the sequencers. The pandemic has obviously slowed JGI down a …
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… of their synthases so that we can start to use the DNA sequence to predict or just understand better the language … your interest in getting into natural products. DAN: Why are you here at SIMB? AARON PURI: Yeah. Thanks Jackie. … favorite bacterial community. For us, it’s these methane oxidizing bacterial communities that we like to look through …
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… capabilities and products . A minimum request of 1 Tb of sequence data is required to qualify for BERSS. For DNA … . … The JGI is inviting researchers using the U.S. Culture Collection Network (USCCN) to nominate their strains … and personnel resources for genomic research and sequence-based science. Projects include de novo generation …
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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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… stories about natural products, so you can get a feel for why I think they’re so important, and we’ll start to explain … more about some of the background and sort of the reasons why we want to do this. And also to provide a little more … more. And then eventually they figured out that they could culture the plant cells and produce enough that way in …
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Corps, I decided I wanted to go into international agriculture. I had really changed my mind. I was thinking of … out introns and dealing with, you know, weirdness in the sequence. You know, some clusters are not clustered… … it so easily with fungi. So… NANCY: Yeah, I don’t know why. For example, with that – actually there’s a good talk …
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… it was good. DAN: Yeah, I think you brought some of that culture too, to the Townsend lab, too, when you got there, … you maybe explain what’s going on with their biology and why they’re so important to natural products? ERIC: Sure. … turns a peptide, for example, from a disordered sequence into an antibiotic that kills bacteria through a …
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