ADVERTISEMENT

404

Not Found

Is this what you were looking for?

tag helicobacter pylori genetics genomics

Genomic Comparison of H. pylori Strains
Jennifer Fisher Wilson | Feb 4, 2001 | 3 min read
For this article, Jennifer Fisher Wilson interviewed Richard A. Alm, principal research scientist, infection discovery at AstraZeneca R&D Boston. Data from the Web of Science (ISI, Philadelphia) show that Hot Papers are cited 50 to 100 times more often than the average paper of the same type and age.   R.A. Alm, L.S. Ling, D.T. Moir, B.L. King, E.D. Brown, P.C. Doig, D.R. Smith, B. Noonan, B.C. Guild, B.L. deJonge, G. Carmel, P.J. Tummino, A. Caruso, M. Uria-Nickelsen, D.M. Mills, C.
Genetics
The Scientist Staff | Jul 18, 1999 | 3 min read
Edited by: Eugene Russo Reprinted with the permission of Nature and The Institute for Genomic Research Circular representation of the H. pylori chromosome. The outer concentric circle is the predicted coding region on the plus strnd; the second concentric circle is the predicted coding region on the minus strand. At the third and fourth concentric circles are insertion sequence (IS) elements (red) -- short DNA sequences in bacteria capable of transposing to a new genomic location -- and other
strain differences influence host responses
Tudor Toma(ttoma@mail.dntis.ro) | Mar 18, 2001 | 1 min read
Patients with chronic gastritis produced by Helicobacter pylori are at risk of duodenal and gastric ulceration and gastric cancer. The majority of H. pylori-colonized individuals remain asymptomatic, however, and the mechanism of this resistance is not fully understood. A study published in the March issue of Journal of Clinical Investigation shows that genetic differences between strains of Helicobacter pylori influence host inflammatory responses (J Clin Invest 2001, 107:611-620). Dawn Israel
Cow image
Slideshow: Examples of Eukaryotic Horizontal Gene Transfer
Christie Wilcox, PhD | Jul 5, 2022 | 4 min read
Horizontally transferred genes play significant roles in eukaryotic genomes
Composite image of earliest humans and wooly mammoths
New Evidence Complicates the Story of the Peopling of the Americas
Emma Yasinski | May 2, 2022 | 10+ min read
New techniques have shown that people reached the New World far earlier than the long-standing estimate of 13,000 years ago, but scientists still debate exactly when humans arrived on the continent—and how.
Top 7 genetics papers
Alison McCook | Nov 1, 2010 | 3 min read
A snapshot of the highest-ranked articles in genetics and related areas in the past 30 days
Notebook
The Scientist Staff | Dec 10, 1995 | 7 min read
The Board of Directors of City Trusts of the city of Philadelphia honored three researchers last month for inventions that have contributed to the "comfort, welfare, and happiness" of mankind. The three were given John Scott Awards, consisting of a copper medal and a $10,000 prize. An unshared award went to Barry J. Marshall, a 1995 Lasker laureate and a clinical associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Virginia, for discovering the bacterium Helicobacter pylori and its rol
Bacteria and Humans Have Been Swapping DNA for Millennia
Kelly Robinson and Julie Dunning Hotopp | Oct 1, 2016 | 8 min read
Bacteria inhabit most tissues in the human body, and genes from some of these microbes have made their way to the human genome. Could this genetic transfer contribute to diseases such as cancer?
Comparative Genomics Reveals The Interrelatedness Of Life
Ricki Lewis | Jan 4, 1998 | 7 min read
Photo: Karen Young Kreeger EXCITING ERA: TIGR's Craig Venter says efforts to unravel the information being gathered will last "into the next century." While the list of genome projects grows, research focus is shifting from structure to function. So even as automated DNA sequencers crank out bases and powerful software overlaps pieces of genomes (contigs) to establish gene orders, investigators are searching and comparing those sequences among species, an approach called comparative genomics.
The Human Genome -- One Year Later
Brendan Maher | Feb 3, 2002 | 6 min read
For this article, Brendan A. Maher interviewed Eric S. Lander, director, Whitehead Institute Center for Genome Research, Cambridge, Mass., and J. Craig Venter, then president and chief scientific officer, Celera Genomics Group, Rockville, Md. Data from the Web of Science (ISI, Philadelphia) show that Hot Papers are cited 50 to 100 times more often than the average paper of the same type and age. J.C. Venter et al., "The sequence of the human genome, Science, 291:1304-51, Feb.16, 2001. (Cited in

Run a Search

ADVERTISEMENT