Archive

  • Visit JGI.DOE.GOV
All JGI Features
Home › Archives for Leila Hornick
Page 45 of 64« First«...102030...4344454647...5060...»Last »

March 5, 2010

Naegleria genome project on NPR

Step aside, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Here’s a story about an organism that dramatically transforms itself when it’s under stress. It turns from a lethargic amoeba into a sprightly, two-armed swimmer. This unlikely single-celled creature is named Naegleria gruberi. It lives in the dirt, under the eucalyptus trees, on the University of California, Berkeley… [Read More]

March 5, 2010

Naegleria genome project on PhysOrg.com

Scientists have now sequenced the genome of a weird, single-celled organism called Naegleria gruberi that is telling biologists about that transition from prokaryotes, which function just fine with all their proteins floating around in a soup, to eukaryotes, which neatly compartmentalize those proteins? The sequence, produced by the Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (JGI),… [Read More]

March 5, 2010

Naegleria genome project on ScienceDaily

Naegleria is a common soil amoeba — the sequenced organism was isolated from the mud in a grove of eucalyptus trees on the UC Berkeley campus — that, under stress, quickly grows two flagella, like sperm tails, that it uses to swim around. It has a third identity, a hard cyst, that can persist in… [Read More]

March 5, 2010

Naegleria genome project on redOrbit

“In a sense, analyzing the Naegleria genome shows us what it would be like to be on this planet more than a billion years ago, and what kind of organisms were around then and what they might have looked like,” said Simon E. Prochnik, a JGI and UC Berkeley bioinformaticist and coauthor of the Cell… [Read More]

March 5, 2010

Naegleria genome project on EurekAlert

Scientists have now sequenced the genome of a weird, single-celled organism called Naegleria gruberi that is telling biologists about that transition from prokaryotes, which function just fine with all their proteins floating around in a soup, to eukaryotes, which neatly compartmentalize those proteins? The sequence, produced by the Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (JGI),… [Read More]

March 4, 2010

MIT Technology Review: JGI to test PacBio’s new sequencer

The company unveiled the instrument to attendees of the Advances in Genome Biology and Technology meeting, a swanky event that has become the place to make a splash in sequencing. With venture funding of $266 million to date and a unique technology capable of reading single DNA molecules in real-time, Pacific Biosciences has been the… [Read More]

March 4, 2010

Soybean project in GenomeWeb literature reference

A large team comprised of researchers from Purdue University, the US Department of Energy’s Joint Genome Institute, and the US Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service used whole-genome shotgun sequencing to sequence roughly 85 percent of the 1.1-gigabase soybean, Glycine max, genome. The paper describes how the team integrated the shotgun approach with physical and… [Read More]

March 4, 2010

JGI researchers on Caliper’s Scientific Advisory Board

Caliper Life Sciences Inc., a Hopkinton-based provider of tools and services for drug discovery and life sciences research, recently formed a scientific advisory board to guide its efforts in automated sample preparation for next-generation and third-generation sequencing platforms. Read more at Metro West Daily News.  [Read More]

February 25, 2010

JGI to get PacBio machine on Forbes

PacBio’s DNA-sequencing technology generated a huge amount of excitement when it was described in a cover article in Science because it could someday make it possible to sequence an entire genome in minutes for less than $1,000. The first machines now being rolled out are only a step on the way to this goal, and… [Read More]

February 25, 2010

JGI named a PacBio customer on GenomeWeb

The first 10 early-access customers are Baylor College of Medicine, the Broad Institute, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, the US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, the Genome Center at Washington University, Monsanto, the National Cancer Institute/SAIC-Frederick, the National Center for Genome Resources, the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, and Stanford University. Read more at GenomeWeb. [Read More]
Page 45 of 64« First«...102030...4344454647...5060...»Last »

More from the JGI archives:

  • Software Tools
  • Science Highlights
  • News Releases
  • Blog
  • User Proposals
  • 2018-24 Strategic Plan
  • Progress Reports
  • Historical Primers
  • Legacy Projects
  • Past Events
  • JGI.DOE.GOV
  • Disclaimer
  • Accessibility / Section 508
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Biosciences Area
A project of the US Department of Energy, Office of Science

JGI is a DOE Office of Science User Facility managed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

© 1997-2025 The Regents of the University of California