Scientists Sequence Woolly-Mammoth Genome
Wednesday, November 19, 2008 - 14:00
in Biology & Nature
Scientists at Penn State are leaders of a team that is the first to report the genome-wide sequence of an extinct animal, according to Webb Miller, professor of biology and of computer science and engineering and one of the project's two leaders. The scientists sequenced the genome of the woolly mammoth, an extinct species of elephant that was adapted to living in the cold environment of the northern hemisphere. They sequenced four billion DNA bases using next-generation DNA-sequencing instruments and a novel approach that reads ancient DNA highly efficiently.
Read the whole article on Physorg
More from Physorg
Related
- Scientists sequence woolly-mammoth genomeWed, 19 Nov 2008, 13:38:00 EST
- Little-known marine decomposers attract the attention of genome sequencersMon, 29 Jun 2009, 12:49:44 EDT
- 'Genome 10K' proposal aims to sequence 10,000 vertebratesWed, 4 Nov 2009, 14:46:05 EST
- Complete Genomics publishes in Science on low-cost sequencing of 3 human genomesThu, 5 Nov 2009, 15:22:31 EST
- Genome sequence for the domestic horse to be unveiledThu, 5 Nov 2009, 15:22:05 EST