HomeUncategorizedGenome-wide association study of CNVs in 16,000 cases of eight common diseases and 3,000 shared controls Genome-wide association study of CNVs in 16,000 cases of eight common diseases and 3,000 shared controls March 31, 2010 / Copy Number Variation, Publications A new paper that I contributed has been recently published in Nature. This paper is a thorough examination of association of thousands of common CNVs to disease. You can reach the full text of the article here. Related news New paper: Evolutionary biology of cellular aging (We got the cover) July 8, 2018 / Evolution, Publications, Research An evolutionary transcriptomics approach links CD36 to membrane remodeling in replicative senescence Press release by Charlotte Hsu Academic minute podcast by our collaborator Ekin Atilla… New Paper: An incomplete sweep of a metabolizing gene September 4, 2018 / Copy Number Variation, Evolution, Genetic Anthropology, Publications, Research A whole gene deletion sounds awful! You lose one entire gene and hence the protein that this gene is coding. However, there exist several gene… Recent Common Ancestry between Native Americans and Indigenous Altaians February 2, 2012 / Genetic Anthropology, Publications I was pleasantly surprised when I received the news that Matt [Dulik]’s paper on the genetic variation of Altai populations, of which I am a…
New paper: Evolutionary biology of cellular aging (We got the cover) July 8, 2018 / Evolution, Publications, Research An evolutionary transcriptomics approach links CD36 to membrane remodeling in replicative senescence Press release by Charlotte Hsu Academic minute podcast by our collaborator Ekin Atilla…
New Paper: An incomplete sweep of a metabolizing gene September 4, 2018 / Copy Number Variation, Evolution, Genetic Anthropology, Publications, Research A whole gene deletion sounds awful! You lose one entire gene and hence the protein that this gene is coding. However, there exist several gene…
Recent Common Ancestry between Native Americans and Indigenous Altaians February 2, 2012 / Genetic Anthropology, Publications I was pleasantly surprised when I received the news that Matt [Dulik]’s paper on the genetic variation of Altai populations, of which I am a…