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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 and determine how they function, explained Jonathan Eisen, University of California, Davis researcher and head of the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea project of the Department of Energy’s Joint Genome Institute, which aims to catalogue genomic data for all major branches of microorganisms.

Read the rest of the iSGTW story to learn more.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: GEBA, Jonathan Eisen, metagenomics, microbes, UC Davis

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