human genome in English

noun

complete map of all genes in human DNA, all of the DNA of a perso

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "human genome" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "human genome", or refer to the context using the word "human genome" in the English Dictionary.

1. The year Venter sequenced the human genome.

2. The Human Genome Project, or a Mars Rover mission.

3. The human genome bears witness to this process, too.

4. These Anchorings used the Hg15 draft of the Human genome

5. So that begs the question: Who is the Human Genome Project actually for?

6. In 1986 he was among the scientists who launched the Human Genome Project.

7. To date, 44 Chemokines and 23 chemokine receptors have been identified in the human genome

8. There might also be mistaken matches with the many duplicated regions of the human genome.

9. The recent success in mapping the entire human genome has given such aspirations new impetus.

10. Venter defied his critics and deciphered the human genome with startling speed about eight years ago.

11. Abundancy of polymorphic CGG repeats in the human genome suggest a broad involvement in neurological disease

12. Scientists estimate that 3 percent of the human genome can be traced back to retrovirus infections.

13. Once the entire human genome has been mapped and sequenced it will become amenable to manipulation.

14. 16 Hubbard agrees that it ought to be possible to overlay the mouse on the human genome.

15. The Chromosome image below is the online version of Chromosome 1 depicted on the Human Genome Landmarks poster

16. The Human Genome Analysis programme (HGAP) was part of the Second Framework Programme for research and technological demonstration.

17. Around 42% of the human genome is made up of retrotransposons, while DNA transposons account for about 2–3%.

18. 12 Human Genome Sciences gain boosted shares of other biotechnology companies, many of which are based in southern Maryland.

19. Many genes encoding KRAB-Containing proteins are arranged in clusters in the human genome, with one cluster close to chromos …

20. The correlation existing between the biochemical and the cytogenetic findings shows that the amount of rDNA in the human genome is not primarily a function of the number of acrocentric chromosomes, but depends on the individual combination of the variant NORs occurring in the human genome.

21. The publication of the research may puzzle those who thought that the race to the human genome was over last June.

22. The human genome has a cluster of several Amylase genes that are expressed at high levels in either salivary gland or pancreas

23. Since then, cats, deer, dogs, horses, mules, rabbits and other mammals have all been Cloned, according to the National Human Genome Research Institute

24. The haploid human genome (23 chromosomes) is estimated to be about 3.2 billion bases long and to contain 20,000–25,000 distinct protein-coding genes.

25. Mapping the human genome was the first step in unraveling the secrets of genetics, and today the pinnacle of that research is what's known as Crispr technology

26. Dr Venter himself is a pioneer of DNA research, and led one of the two scientific teams that managed to sequence the human genome by June 2000.

27. A lot of Abductees claim that aliens are editing their DNA, and many UFO researchers (myself included) believe that the goal of extraterrestrials is to guide evolution and alter the human genome

28. Today, you can have a complete sequence of the three billion base pairs in the human genome at a cost of about 20,000 dollars and in the space of about a week.

29. This is an enormous task — far greater than the mapping of the human genome, given that the numbers and the various configurations of proteins exceed by orders of magni-tude the numbers of genes.

30. In this regard, we present bioinformatic analyses that show: (i) aspecific, spurious Annealings of the available primers in multiple homologous sites of the human genome; (ii) strict homologies between whole XMRV genome and interspersed repetitive elements widespread in mammalian genomes

31. Approved: Bioinformatics adjective Referring to a gene symbol, gene name, allele symbol, allele name, protein, enzyme, organism, etc., which has been accepted as a standard term by the Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI), Human Genome Organisation (HUGO), UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot, or any other formal nomenclature committee.

32. Cels, Cellulose 1,4-beta-cellobiosidase (reducing end), an enzyme Cels ratings, a supervisory rating system to classify a bank's overall condition; HUGO Committee on Ethics, Law and Society (Cels) of the Human Genome Organisation; Center for Legal and Social Studies [] (Cels), Spanish human rights organization presided by Horacio Verbitsky

33. What we're left with is a collection of five million books, 500 billion words, a string of characters a thousand times longer than the human genome -- a text which, when written out, would stretch from here to the Moon and back 10 times over -- a veritable shard of our cultural genome.

34. So we've teamed up with the decoder of the human genome, Craig Venter, and the company he founded with Peter Diamandis, the founder of the X Prize, to genetically modify the pig genome so that the pig's organs will not be rejected by the human body and thereby to create an unlimited supply of transplantable organs.

35. Concerned to safeguard human rights in the Member States, the Council of Europe gave precise indications at Oviedo: a ban on any form of discrimination based on genetic inheritance; a ban on interventions on the human genome that go beyond therapeutic purposes; an absolute ban on changing the hereditary genome; and a ban on choosing a baby' s sex.

36. Centromeres have been one of the most mysterious parts of the human genome since they were characterized, in the 1970s, as large tracts of 171–base pair (bp) strings called alpha-satellite monomers (1, 2).With a growing body of evidence suggesting their relevance to human diseases as sources of genomic instability or as repositories of haplotypes containing causative mutations