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Two new papers in Nature Biotechnology report methods for targeted sequencing of complex DNA samples, achieved in real time during nanopore sequencing runs.
An article in Cell describes a multi-omic analysis of health risks from spaceflights that implicates mitochondrial stress and dysregulation as key drivers.
A study in Genome Biology uses EpiGo-KRAB to analyse the roles of H3K9me3 in genome organization and transcriptional repression and reveals the two functions may be distinct.
Two studies in Nature report regulatory roles for H1 in chromatin compaction and 3D genome organization and establish H1 mutations as a driver of tumorigenesis.
Jin et al. describe a barcoding approach for analysing metastasis, which they used to generate an organ-specific metastasis map for 500 cancer cell lines.
A new study in Nature demonstrates that re-setting the epigenetic age of retinal ganglion cells re-establishes youthful gene expression programmes and restores vision in glaucomatous and aged mice.
A study in Nature Biotechnology presents a library of transcription factors that are able to induce differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells as a resource for cell and tissue engineering.
Two new reports in Cell use genome-wide CRISPR screens to uncover host determinants of coronavirus infection, identifying potential leads for antiviral therapeutics.
SHARE-seq, a new high-throughput, high-resolution multi-omics method described in Cell, measures chromatin accessibility and gene expression in the same cell and enables future potential gene expression (and therefore lineage choices) to be inferred from chromatin profiles.
A recent study re-casts proteomic analyses as a DNA sequencing problem; by fusing in vivo-expressed proteins to their encoding mRNA, molecular interactions can be identified and quantified through high-throughput nucleic-acid sequencing.
The GTEx consortium reports results from its third and final phase in several new papers. They provide unprecedented detail of human gene expression regulation across tissues.
A study in Molecular Biology and Evolution reports de novo genome sequences for 17 bumblebee species spanning all 15 subgenera. This valuable resource should provide a deeper biological understanding of these commercially and ecologically important pollinators.
A study in Nature Genetics reports the analysis of 172 whole-genome sequences of indigenous African cattle and identifies loci associated with environmental adaptations among crossbred animals.
A study in Science suggests that regeneration-responsive enhancers drive a regeneration response programme (RRP) in killifish and zebrafish and that changes in RRPs might have facilitated the loss of regenerative capacity in vertebrates.
Two papers in Cell report large-scale genome-wide association studies that provide new insights into the genetic architecture of haematopoietic phenotypes and emphasize the importance of large, diverse data sets.
In Africa, there is a disparity in ethics and permission requirements for molecular research on samples from living people versus ancient DNA. At the precipice of the archaeogenomics revolution, heritage agencies require updated policies and procedures for genetic and genomic research on African ancient DNA.