Okarsligil news: Difference between revisions

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==Interesting News from Web==
==Interesting News from Web==
Following are news that I saw on internet on bioinformatics topics. I will try to keep this page uptodate. If you find interesting things please let me know by [mailto://okarsligil@gmail.com email]
Following are news that I saw on internet on bioinformatics topics. I will try to keep this page uptodate. If you find interesting things please let me know by [mailto://okarsligil@gmail.com email]
===March 28, 2006===
===="Accelerated Evolution" Converts RNA Enzyme to DNA Enzyme In Vitro====
Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute have successfully converted an RNA enzyme (ribozyme) into a DNA enzyme (deoxyribozyme) through a process of accelerated in vitro evolution. The molecular conversion or transfer of both genetic information and catalytic function between these two different genetic systems, which are both based on nucleic acid-like molecules, is exactly what many scientists believe occurred during the very earliest period of earth's existence.


[http://www.scripps.edu/newsandviews/e_20060327/evo.html More on this story]
===March 27, 2006===
===March 27, 2006===
====New RNAi tools enable systematic studies of gene function====
====New RNAi tools enable systematic studies of gene function====

Revision as of 08:30, 28 March 2006

Interesting News from Web

Following are news that I saw on internet on bioinformatics topics. I will try to keep this page uptodate. If you find interesting things please let me know by email

March 28, 2006

"Accelerated Evolution" Converts RNA Enzyme to DNA Enzyme In Vitro

Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute have successfully converted an RNA enzyme (ribozyme) into a DNA enzyme (deoxyribozyme) through a process of accelerated in vitro evolution. The molecular conversion or transfer of both genetic information and catalytic function between these two different genetic systems, which are both based on nucleic acid-like molecules, is exactly what many scientists believe occurred during the very earliest period of earth's existence.

More on this story

March 27, 2006

New RNAi tools enable systematic studies of gene function

An international public-private research team led by scientists at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard announced today the construction and availability of an extensive library of molecular reagents to silence most human and mouse genes.

More on this story

Junk DNA may not be so junky after all

Researchers at the McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine at Johns Hopkins have invented a cost-effective and highly efficient way of analyzing what many have termed "junk" DNA and identified regions critical for controlling gene function. And they have found that these control regions from different species don't have to look alike to work alike.

More on this story