Category: News

  • Genome study reveals 30 years of Darwin’s finch evolution

    Genome study reveals 30 years of Darwin’s finch evolution

    An international team of researchers has released a landmark study on contemporary evolutionary change in natural populations. Their study uses one of the largest genomic datasets ever produced for a wild animal, comprising nearly 4,000 Darwin’s finches, to reveal the genetic basis of adaptation in this iconic group.

  • Biotech founder and hero of the Human Genome Project joins UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute as Executive Director

    Biotech founder and hero of the Human Genome Project joins UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute as Executive Director

    After an extensive national search, the UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute has selected a bold new executive director to lead their next phase of expansion and innovation. Dr. Lauren Linton is a scientist, entrepreneur, and executive with experience leading institutions in genomics, pharmaceutical and diagnostic development, biotechnology, entrepreneurship, and innovation.

  • UCSC’s David Deamer and Mark Akeson honored for invention of nanopore sequencing

    UCSC’s David Deamer and Mark Akeson honored for invention of nanopore sequencing

    Today, two UC Santa Cruz researchers were honored at the Library of Congress for the invention of nanopore sequencing, which became a new and revolutionary method to read DNA and RNA. David Deamer and Mark Akeson, both emeritus professors of biomolecular engineering at the Baskin School of Engineering, received the American Association for the Advancement…

  • Human Pangenome Named a GA4GH Driver Project

    Human Pangenome Named a GA4GH Driver Project

    GA4GH Driver Projects are real-world initiatives that help build and implement GA4GH standards, tools, and frameworks. They give voice to the broader genomics community and ensure GA4GH products serve real needs.

  • Innovation Catalyst Grants Fund Braingeneers Research

    Innovation Catalyst Grants Fund Braingeneers Research

    Haussler and Teodorescu were awarded $50,000 for their work in developing a revolutionary approach to cell culture that allows for more efficient testing on human organoids. Their innovation promises to significantly enhance the realism and scalability of experiments in biological research and will allow for new discoveries in cancer treatment, stroke, heart attack, and brain…

  • Yatish Turakhia one of “35 innovators under 35”

    Yatish Turakhia one of “35 innovators under 35”

    Former Genomics Institute postdoc Yatish Turakhia has been chosen as one of MIT Technology Review’s 2023 Innovators Under 35, in part for software tools he created at UC Santa Cruz to help track the Covid-19 pandemic. He is now evolving those tools so they can be used with other diseases.

  • New protocols make long-read sequencing feasible on larger scale

    New protocols make long-read sequencing feasible on larger scale

    Researchers at UC Santa Cruz’s Computational Genomics Lab and their collaborators have released new wet-lab and computational protocols that will make long-read sequencing feasible for large genomics projects. These protocols, which they have already implemented in a National Institute of Health project for Alzheimer’s research, will allow researchers to characterize regions of the genome that…

  • Novel device combines nanopores with electronic signals for disease detection

    Novel device combines nanopores with electronic signals for disease detection

    In living organisms, cells have a very high capacity to process and communicate information by moving molecules or ions through tiny channels that span the cell membrane. UC Santa Cruz Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Marco Rolandi’s lab and collaborators at MIT have created a device that mimics this biological concept in order to…

  • GREAT program creates new opportunities for students to participate in research

    GREAT program creates new opportunities for students to participate in research

    In the UC Santa Cruz Paleogenomics Lab, NSF postdoctoral fellow Andrew Sharo is using DNA from 100-year-old samples of steelhead trout to study how their populations have changed over time. It is important work — in California, local steelhead populations are endangered or threatened, and the answers Sharo finds in their genomes could help us…

  • New blood test for noncoding RNA significantly improves cancer detection

    Cancer is most treatable in its early stages, so finding innovative and non-invasive methods to diagnose cancer early on is crucial for fighting the disease. Liquid biopsies, which require just a simple blood draw, are an emerging technology for non-invasively testing for cancer using DNA or RNA sequencing of a patient’s blood.

  • Ten Mysteries of the Y Chromosome

    Ten Mysteries of the Y Chromosome

    The Y chromosome is full of mysteries. What will researchers discover now that they have finally completed sequencing it? We share our top ten questions about the Y chromosome, and the answers we have so far!

  • Scientists release the first complete sequence of a human Y chromosome

    Scientists release the first complete sequence of a human Y chromosome

    For decades, the Y chromosome – one of the two human sex chromosomes – has been notoriously challenging for the genomics community to sequence due to the complexity of its structure. Now, this elusive area of the genome has been fully sequenced, a feat that finally completes the set of end-to-end human chromosomes and adds…

Last modified: Jan 29, 2024