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… long as I can remember, by bacterial research. So it was great to hear her passion and enthusiasm for fungi. And we … 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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… agent properties. And on the one hand, it was really great training and I learned a lot. But oftentimes, it would … The genes are pretty much 100% identical. We don't know why one is expressed over the other. As far as whether we're … usually serve as dimers, and then they will bind to certain sequences of DNA. And when they bind to those certain …
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… this we’re going to be spending some time talking some great scientists, who all have really interesting stories … able to explore DNA sequencing and actually get to the DNA sequence – sequences for the genes that code for the … Something that’s you know … ALISON: Central! DAN: That’s why they called it that! But for, maybe, people who are less …
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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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… and I were lucky to get some time to sit down and have a great chat with him. I kind of lost count of how many times … then genomics happened. Dan: Yeah, I did my first genome sequence with you. Brad: That’s right, Dan: JGI did it in … working with you, Dan, on this one, and we said, “Well, why don’t we have you know, the bioinformaticians go against …
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… who already work in natural products, you’re going to get a great look at the intersection of traditional medicines and … culture-disconnected. Like we’ll take some soil samples and sequence all the bugs out of that or whatever. And so I was … methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus . Can you share why finding treatments for these microbes is so important? …
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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 … we’re all here together. ALISON: How beautiful. What a great partnership. DAN: Yeah, I guess so. You know, it’s …
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… coming up, August 30th through September 1st. Three days of great science, and all online and free. We had to cancel … meeting virtually, and registration is totally free. It’s a great opportunity to learn more about JGI, hear some … to some people more about down the road. Email Nigel! He’ll sequence whatever you want! [LAUGHTER] NIGEL MOUNCEY: We …
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… sampled the microbial communities living in the mountaintop lakes of the Sierra Nevada mountains. These lakes are isolated, but varied. They’re a great way to see how climate change affects freshwater …
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… phylogenetic tree without cultivated representatives. The “Great Plate-Count Anomaly” first described by Stanley and … is also reflected in the strongly biased representation of sequenced genomes in the public domain, the bulk of which …
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… capabilities support researchers exploring how to convert sequence into functional assessments. This is done by … design tool … BOOST provides a suite of tools to automate sequence design for assembly by Gibson, Yeast recombination …
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