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July 31, 2009

“Hiram College Stays on the Forefront of Genomics Education”

Understanding what a DNA sequence can tell you is not only crucial to modern medicine, but also to efforts in basic science, agriculture, bioenergy and industrial biotechnology. Providing students with the theoretical background is a first step, but nothing beats the opportunity to do it for real. Cheryl Kerfeld, Head of the Education Program for… [Read More]

July 29, 2009

JGI’s Cheryl Kerfeld teams with Hiram College for annotation education

Cheryl Kerfeld, a member of the Center’s Advisory Council and Head of the Education Program for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Joint Genome Institute in Walnut Creek, California, and her colleagues have successfully launched a national program to involve undergraduates in annotating hundreds of new bacterial genomes. Hiram has benefited greatly from our collaborations with… [Read More]

July 27, 2009

Re UQ/JGI’s sea sponge genome sequencing collaboration

[N]one of the projects investigating those potential benefits would be possible without the entire sea sponge genome sequence, which Professor Degnan’s lab successfully mapped and will be publishing this year. “We and our colleagues at the Joint Genome Institute (US Department of Energy) are the ones who drove this project which really puts us in… [Read More]

July 24, 2009

JGI’s Jonathan Eisen in iSGTW

In metagenomics, scientists grind up samples containing many different organisms and extract all the DNA they can, not knowing which pieces of DNA came from which organisms. A one-gram soil sample can contain up to several million species of microbes all mixed together. The scientists sequence small, random fragments of the DNA to identify species… [Read More]

July 17, 2009

JGI’s Jonathan Eisen on the new “worst ‘-omics’ word” award

And the winner of the “worst new omics word award” is [available at Eisen’s blog]…. Amazingly, I missed this when the New York Times used it in a headline… Eisen’s blog on the new word and its meaning has also been picked up by GenomeWeb. [Read More]

July 14, 2009

JGI Summer 2009 Primer now available for download

Featuring, in no particular order: Micromonas algae and the global carbon cycle the brown-rot fungus Postia placenta JGI researchers call for standards in genome sequencing and annotation at a conference in Santa Fe, NM studying the Great Salt Lake in Utah on JGI User Meeting keynotes by Chris Somerville, Craig Venter and George Church, plus… [Read More]

July 14, 2009

JGI/AgResearch collaboration on TVNZ

New Zealand scientists trying to find a cost-effective way of reducing livestock emissions of major greenhouse gases, nitrous oxide and methane, are to be given a helping hand by American researchers. The US Department of Energy’s joint genome institute (JGI) is helping researchers have the DNA of microbes in the forestomach (rumen) of livestock animals… [Read More]

July 14, 2009

Texan termite hindgut project part of JGI’s CSP 2010

Dr. Jorge Rodrigues, a University of Texas at Arlington microbiologist, has been selected for a highly competitive genome sequencing project by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute. Rodrigues will sequence the genome of a microorganism isolated from a termite’s hindgut as part of an effort to identify solutions to climate change. The Joint… [Read More]

July 14, 2009

DOE JGI’s Phil Hugenholtz at “Microbes at UQ” Symposium

Keynote speaker Dr Phil Hugenholtz will be describing recent advances in the metagenomic analysis of the microbial communities within the termite hind-gut, following on from work published in Nature in 2007. The stomachs of termites actually harbor a gold mine of microbes that have now been tapped as a rich source of enzymes for improving… [Read More]

July 14, 2009

Nikos Kyrpides on microbial genomics

Microbes contribute to manifold human endeavors ranging from bioenergy to agriculture to medicine. Moreover, they make the Earth’s biogeochemical cycles go round, a prerequisite for all life on the planet. Exceedingly numerous, they are also extremely diverse, encompassing most of Earth’s total biodiversity. So it should come as no surprise to find that two-thirds of… [Read More]
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