Connection Between Epigenome, Selective Mutability, Evolution, and Human Disease
Li, Harris et al., PLoS Genetics
Researchers at the Baylor College of Medicine and elsewhere propose a "connection between the epigenome, selective mutability, evolution, and human disease" based on the findings of their study on associations of structural mutability with germline DNA methylation and with non-allelic homologous recombination mediated by low-copy repeats. "Combined evidence from four human sperm methylome maps, human genome evolution, structural polymorphisms in the human population, and previous genomic and disease studies consistently points to a strong association of germline hypomethylation and genomic instability," the Baylor-led team writes.
At AGBT, Sequencing Centers Provide Updates on Capacity, Projects
Earlier this month at the Advances in Genome Biology and Technology conference, several centers — including the Broad Institute, Baylor College of Medicine, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, the Yale Center for Genome Analysis, and the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center — provided updates on their current sequencing capacity and how they are putting it to use.
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