Tag: genetics

Fun litte new #Genetics  student journal by students by students of The Wellcome…

Fun litte new #Genetics  student journal by students by students of The Wellcome…

Fun litte new #Genetics  student journal by students by students of The Wellcome Trust Sanger and +Cambridge University: the Cambridge Student Journal of Genetics! 

http://bit.ly/XPSXfa

Cambridge Student Journal of Genetics
Student-run journal covering all aspects of genetics

Want to understand what this ENCODE thing is all about? Watch this amazing animated…

Want to understand what this ENCODE thing is all about? Watch this amazing animated…

Want to understand what this ENCODE thing is all about? Watch this amazing animated movie very elegantly explaining the basics of what makes this project so exciting and what the implications are on a level that even non scientist understand! Brilliantly done +Nature Publishing Group

Genomes Certainly Are Tricky!

Thanks +Benedetta Frida Baldi for this great find!  

#ENCODE   #science   #genomics   #genetics   #epigenetics  

The Story of You: ENCODE and the human genome
Ever since a monk called Mendel started breeding pea plants we’ve been learning about our genomes. In 1953, Watson, Crick and Franklin described the structur…

I think for a paper like this it would be more interesting to see if the amount of…

I think for a paper like this it would be more interesting to see if the amount of…

I think for a paper like this it would be more interesting to see if the amount of mutations with a functional effect (coding or regulatory) is also increasing with age and with what rate this is happening. 

Another great thing would be if they would actually sequence the same person with samples from each a different age and see the actual changes instead of the inferred mutations. 

Paper: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v488/n7412/full/nature11396.html#/affil-auth
#paper  
#genomics    #genetics   #sequencing   #evolution  

Reshared post from +Lorna Salgado

"Men in their 20s harbor about 25 random mutations, while a 40-year-old man has 65 mutations on average."

Scientists have found solid evidence that older men have more random mutations in their sperm cells. They're warning that can cause autism, schizophrenia and a long list of other genetic diseases in their offspring.

The new report, in the journal Nature, comes from deCODE Genetics, an Icelandic firm that studied the entire genomes of 78 families involving 219 individuals.

It's not the first time researchers have suggested the father's age is linked to increased genetic risk. The hypothesis goes back nearly a century. But the Icelandic researchers have shown that the father's contribution to genetic disorders is far higher than the mother's.
 
It makes sense. Men churn out around 200 million sperm a day, providing 200 million daily opportunities for spontaneous "point" mutations when genes get mis-copied. But once women reach puberty, they don't make new egg cells, so their rate of mutations – usually errors in chromosomes, or whole groups of genes – is fixed.

And sure enough, the new paper shows that the rate of new mutations rises steadily in men's germ cells – doubling every 16 1/2 years. Men in their 20s harbor about 25 random mutations, while a 40-year-old man has 65 mutations on average.

Embedded Link

Kids Of Older Fathers Likelier To Have Genetic Ailments : NPR
Icelandic scientists have found solid evidence that older men have more random mutations in their sperm cells. They’re warning that can cause autism, schizophrenia and a long list of other genetic dis…

I think for a paper like this it would be more interesting to see if the amount of mutations with a functional effect (coding or regulatory) is also increasing with age and with what rate this is happening.

I think for a paper like this it would be more interesting to see if the amount of mutations with a functional effect (coding or regulatory) is also increasing with age and with what rate this is happening.

Another great thing would be if they would actually sequence the same person with samples from each a different age and see the actual changes instead of the inferred mutations.

Paper: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v488/n7412/full/nature11396.html#/affil-auth
#paper
#genomics #genetics #sequencing #evolution

Originally shared by +Lorna Salgado

"Men in their 20s harbor about 25 random mutations, while a 40-year-old man has 65 mutations on average."

Scientists have found solid evidence that older men have more random mutations in their sperm cells. They're warning that can cause autism, schizophrenia and a long list of other genetic diseases in their offspring.

The new report, in the journal Nature, comes from deCODE Genetics, an Icelandic firm that studied the entire genomes of 78 families involving 219 individuals.

It's not the first time researchers have suggested the father's age is linked to increased genetic risk. The hypothesis goes back nearly a century. But the Icelandic researchers have shown that the father's contribution to genetic disorders is far higher than the mother's.

It makes sense. Men churn out around 200 million sperm a day, providing 200 million daily opportunities for spontaneous "point" mutations when genes get mis-copied. But once women reach puberty, they don't make new egg cells, so their rate of mutations – usually errors in chromosomes, or whole groups of genes – is fixed.

And sure enough, the new paper shows that the rate of new mutations rises steadily in men's germ cells – doubling every 16 1/2 years. Men in their 20s harbor about 25 random mutations, while a 40-year-old man has 65 mutations on average.

Kids Of Older Fathers Likelier To Have Genetic Ailments : NPR
Icelandic scientists have found solid evidence that older men have more random mutations in their sperm cells. They’re warning that can cause autism, schizophrenia and a long list of other genetic dis…