Busque também em nossas outras coleções:

Tipo de arquivo:

Tipo do arquivo:

Orientação:

Total de Resultados: 2

Página 1 de 1

UIS7225615 A sequencing chromatograph showing a DNA sequence and a sample of DNA from the human genome mapping project carried out by the Medical Research Council in Cambridge. Maps like these plot the position of certain known genes and are preliminary to sequencing the entire genome. The Human Genome Project is expected to produce a sequence of DNA representing the evolutionary history of the human species. In April 2003 international scientists working on the project announced that the decoding of the genome is virtually complete, two years ahead of time. Identifying genes can now be done in days instead of years, with huge potential scientific and medical benefits.
DC
UIS5065799 Genetics Map of chromosome II of the nematode worm, 1989. The Human Genome Project is expected to produce a sequence of DNA representing the evolutionary history of the human species. This map of chromosome II of the nematode worm (a free living or parasitic worm) was made at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, on 2 February 1989. Maps like these plot the position of certain known genes and are preliminary to sequencing the entire genome. The announcement of the genetic sequence of the tiny nematode worm in December 1998 made it the first animal to be entirely characterised genetically. In 2002 John Sulston, Sydney Brenner and Robert Horvitz received the Nobel Prize for Physiology applied to Medicine for their work on the worm. ©SSPL/Science Museum
DC

Total de Resultados: 2

Página 1 de 1