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Biomediation > Sequence
The following information is about Sequence.
Sequence Defined
The succession of one thing or event after another, as of genes along a strand of DNA or geological events in time.
This definition is in context to Biomediation. See more contextual defintions for Sequence.
Transgenomic Obtains Exclusive License to Mitochondrial DNA Damage Detection Technology
Published December 4, 2008, 7:13 am, PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance
Transgenomic today announced that the Clayton Foundation for Research of Houston, Texas through its technology transfer entity, the Research Development Foundation, has granted the Company an exclusive license to patents covering a method for mitochondrial DNA damage detection.
BioSeek Licenses Two Novel Anti-Inflammatory Peptides
Published December 3, 2008, 10:04 pm, DrugDiscoveryOnline
BioSeek, Inc., a pioneer in the application of predictive human biology to drug discovery, announced today that it has exclusively licensed two novel anti-inflammatory peptides from Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc. The two novel peptides were identified as candidates for development by BioSeek as a result of an ongoing joint research collaboration initiated between the two companies in 2007. These ...
Brains of low-income children function differently from brains of high-income kids
Published December 3, 2008, 8:38 pm, News-Medical-Net
University of California, Berkeley, researchers have shown for the first time that the brains of low-income children function differently from the brains of high-income kids.
Agriculture: Gray Mold's Killer Gene Discovered
Published December 3, 2008, 11:11 am, Science Daily
Gray mold is a gardener’s nightmare. The fungus, also known by its scientific name Botrytis cinerea, is a scourge to more than 200 agricultural and ornamental plant species, including staples such as tomatoes, strawberries, snap and lima beans, cabbage, lettuce and endive, peas, peppers, and potatoes. Chemists have now identified the genetic sequence behind gray mold's killer arsenal. The ...
EEGs show brain differences between poor and rich kids
Published December 3, 2008, 6:12 am, EurekAlert!
( University of California - Berkeley ) Prefrontal cortex activity in children from low socioeconomic levels is lower than in similar children from well-off families. The brain differences, documented through EEGs, are dramatic: the prefrontal cortexes of poor kids 9 and 10 years of age react to novel stimuli in the same way as the brain of a stroke victim. The researchers from UC Berkeley and ...
MDRNA Reports UNA-Modified siRNAs Effectively Silence Gene Targets in Animal Models
Published December 3, 2008, 5:00 am, Marketwire via Yahoo! Finance
MDRNA, Inc. announced today positive in vivo efficacy data on its proprietary Unlocked Nucleic Acid (UNA) siRNAs in animal models, demonstrating up to 90% knockdown of ApoB. In addition, the Company continues to report effective and safe delivery of its Lead Candidate for hypercholesterolemia in animal models, with no increase in blood markers of liver or kidney toxicity in single and repeat ...
Roche: Nature Study Uses 454 Sequencing to Reveal Surprising New Clues into the Role of Microbial Communities in the ...
Published December 3, 2008, 5:00 am, Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance
BRANFORD, Conn.----454 Life Sciences, a Roche company, today announced that a team of researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have characterized the human gut microbiome by sequencing the microbial communities of adult twins and their mothers with the Genome Sequencer FLX System.
Brown Chemist Finds Gray Mold's Killer Gene
Published December 3, 2008, 4:11 am, Medical News Today
Gray mold is a gardener's nightmare. The fungus, also known by its scientific name Botrytis cinerea, is a scourge to more than 200 agricultural and ornamental plant species, including staples such as tomatoes, strawberries, snap and lima beans, cabbage, lettuce and endive, peas, peppers, and potatoes.
Keeping Chromosomes From Cuddling Up
Published December 2, 2008, 8:25 pm, Science Daily
If chromosomes snuggle up too closely at the wrong times, the results can be a genetic disaster. Now researchers have found the molecular machines in fruit flies that yank chromosomes apart when necessary. The machines, proteins called condensin II, separate chromosomes by twisting them into supercoils that kink up and therefore can no longer touch. Scientists had known of condensin II, but did ...
Different loves
Published December 2, 2008, 2:05 pm, Philippine Daily Inquirer
“Why is yawning so contagious?” one of my students asked last week. It was a class in anthropological theory and the question is actually quite typical of what we anthropologists deal with: the reasons we humans are the way we are.
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Off-site Sequence Links, User Submitted
The following links have been collected through user bookmark submission in the Sequence category. Please note, because these resources are off-site we cannot guarantee the accuracy or quality of any information.
Thu Dec 4
- Everything Yoga
- NPH.com Scope and Sequence
- The Art of the Title Sequence: This is a pretty cool site devoted to the design and art of title sequences in video. Pretty cool stuff.
- Everything Yoga
- iYogaLife Slideshows - Sweaty is Sexy: Abs
- Visual Science - How Termites Live on a Diet of Wood - NYTimes.com
- /HDTV/ ???????
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Off-site Sequence Research Links
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