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The era of cheap genome sequencing opened the doors to biology as a data science. The data and findings from the hgp came close to being hidden behind patents. Instead they were opened up to the ...
How has the human genome project opened up ways to understand all organisms, even the tiniest ones? With these fast sequencing technologies increasingly available, more and larger genomes could be ...
The Human Genome Project, which launched a quarter of a century ago this week, still holds lessons for the consortium-based science it ushered in, say Eric D. Green, James D. Watson and Francis S ...
Key takeaways UC Santa Cruz posted the first human genome sequence online 25 years ago today, launching a revolution in medicine and biology through open-access science. The Human Genome Project was ...
For the 20-year anniversary of this historic event, we took a look back at the Human Genome Project and its impact. How did it shape science moving forward?
Researchers learned that exciting biology could be gleaned from a whole genome sequence, and this realization sparked genome projects for a multitude of species.
Twenty years after the first human genome sequence was published, scientists have kicked the sequencing game to the next level with a diverse set of 64 genomes.
Completion of the Human Genome Project was a huge milestone, but there’s more work to do to ensure equitable access to the information in our DNA.
Long-term, heritable changes in gene activity fundamentally shape our biology, trigger many of our diseases, and set the clock on how we age. Now, a team of U of U Health scientists is starting an ...
TWENTY YEARS ago, on June 26th 2000, those running the public Human Genome Project and its private-sector shadow, a firm called Celera Genomics, decided to declare victory. In a simultaneous ...
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