Results 281 to 290 of about 1,118,249 (314)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Nature Medicine, 1995
Full analysis of two microbial genomes points towards complete catalogues of virulence and disease genes while tracking the course of evolution.
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Full analysis of two microbial genomes points towards complete catalogues of virulence and disease genes while tracking the course of evolution.
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2009
For over 30 yr, the Sanger method has been the standard for DNA sequencing. Instruments have been developed and improved over time to increase throughput, but they always relied on the same technology. Today, we are facing a revolution in DNA sequencing with many drastically different platforms that have become or will soon become available on the ...
Hervé, Tettelin, Tamara, Feldblyum
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For over 30 yr, the Sanger method has been the standard for DNA sequencing. Instruments have been developed and improved over time to increase throughput, but they always relied on the same technology. Today, we are facing a revolution in DNA sequencing with many drastically different platforms that have become or will soon become available on the ...
Hervé, Tettelin, Tamara, Feldblyum
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Gene, 2012
The existence of fractal sets of DNA sequences have long been suspected on the basis of statistical analyses of genome data. In this article we identify for the first time explicitly the GA-sequences as a class of fractal genomic sequences that are easy to recognize and to extract, and are scattered densely throughout the chromosomes of a large number ...
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The existence of fractal sets of DNA sequences have long been suspected on the basis of statistical analyses of genome data. In this article we identify for the first time explicitly the GA-sequences as a class of fractal genomic sequences that are easy to recognize and to extract, and are scattered densely throughout the chromosomes of a large number ...
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1988
The human genome contains 3 billion base pairs of DNA, sufficient to encode 100,000 to 300,000 genes. Since the number of genes that make up a human being is not known, this estimate is based upon a national average size for a mammalian gene. If the average gene is 30,000 bases long, there will be about 100,000 genes.
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The human genome contains 3 billion base pairs of DNA, sufficient to encode 100,000 to 300,000 genes. Since the number of genes that make up a human being is not known, this estimate is based upon a national average size for a mammalian gene. If the average gene is 30,000 bases long, there will be about 100,000 genes.
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Genome sequencing: Illuminating the sunflower genome
Nature Plants, 2017A high-quality sunflower genome provides insight into Asterid genome evolution. Moreover, integrative analyses based on quantitative genetics, expression and diversity data uncover the gene networks and candidate genes for oil metabolism and flowering time, two important agronomic traits for sunflowers.
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A first genome assembly for nanopore sequencing
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2015Naomi Attar, Attar Naomi
exaly
High-throughput bacterial genome sequencing: an embarrassment of choice, a world of opportunity
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2012Nicholas J Loman +2 more
exaly
Twenty years of bacterial genome sequencing
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2015Nicholas J Loman +2 more
exaly

