Using Single-Cell Multiomics to Characterize Human Developmental Hematopoiesis (Ana Cvejic)

Using Single-Cell Multiomics to Characterize ...

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The Future of Protein–DNA Mapping (Mitch Guttman)

In this episode of the Epigenetics Podcast, we talked with Mitch Guttman from Caltec about ChIP-DIP (ChIP-Done In Parallel). ChIP-DIP is a newly developed approach for high-resolution protein–DNA interaction mapping. The method uses antibody-guided isolation of denaturant-insolub ...  Afficher plus

Chromatin Modifiers and Their Roles in Brain Development (Fides Zenk)

In this episode of the Epigenetics Podcast, we talked with Fides Zenk from the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne about her work on transgenerational inheritance in Drosophila and brain organoids for human development insights. Dr. Zenk begins by sharing her journey into th ...  Afficher plus

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The New Science of Cell Shape
Raising Health

They say you should never judge a book by its cover, but can you judge a cell by its shape? On this episode, host Lauren Richardson is joined by Maddison Masaeli (CEO and cofounder of Deepcell), and a16z general partner Vijay Pande (whose lab at Stanford focused on the develop ...

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‘Pangenome’ aims to capture the breadth of human diversity
Nature Podcast

In this episode:00:45 Making a more diverse human genomeThe first draft of the human genome ushered in a new era of genetics research. Since its publication, researchers have constructed ever more accurate ‘reference genomes’ – baselines against which others are compared. But the ...  Afficher plus

Testing for asymptomatic coronavirus carriers, Human Cell Atlas, and invasive parakeets
BBC Inside Science

You can’t build up a picture of Covid-19’s spread throughout the UK without testing those who might have it and those who might have already had it. Britain currently is only testing people who are hospitalised, some healthcare workers and a handful of exceptions. The upshot is t ...  Afficher plus

How to build a virus-proof cell
Nature Podcast

00:47 An edited genetic code that prevents viral infectionResearchers have engineered bacteria with synthetic genomes to be immune to viral infection. The team streamlined the bacteria’s genetic code, and re-engineered the protein-producing machinery to insert the wrong amino aci ...  Afficher plus