3 11, 2012

Session 1: Cancer genome sequencing

By | November 3rd, 2012|Categories: Conferences|1 Comment

Go back to the summary of the CRI symposium.Overall summary: The top10 BrCA CaGens only account for 50% of mutation load, the tail is going to be important in personalising treatment. Some patients  only show a single driver mutation, can cancer be driven by a […]

29 10, 2012

Millionaire’s shortbread

By | October 29th, 2012|Categories: Uncategorized|0 Comments

We have a tradition in the lab that you bring cakes in on your birthday. Home-made is always encouraged and one of my favourite party bakes is this Millionaire’s shortbread. Enjoy.Mmmm, sweeet!!!Make shortbread:200g/7oz butter115g/4oz caster sugar285g/10oz plain flourCream the butter and sugar, beat till fluffy, […]

17 10, 2012

Foundation Medicine’s cancer genomics test

By | October 17th, 2012|Categories: Uncategorized|13 Comments

In a few years hopefully every cancer patient in the UK will be screened for the most common somatic mutations. CRUK’s Stratified Medicine Project has already tested over 5000 patients as part of a program to roll-out more uniform testing in the NHS.There has been […]

15 10, 2012

AGBT 2013: lottery tickets available tonight!

By | October 15th, 2012|Categories: Uncategorized|0 Comments

The deadline for submitting your registration and abstract to ABGT closes tonight! As I said a few weeks ago this year the organisers are trying harder than ever to make sure the meeting reaches as wide an audience as possible. There are always grumblings from […]

3 10, 2012

How to do better NGS experiments

By | October 3rd, 2012|Categories: Uncategorized|3 Comments

Design, replication, multiplexing. These are the three things I spend most of my time discussing in experimental design meetings. In my institute we hold three 30-minute design sessions every week where users talk to my group and our bioinformatics core about how best to run a […]

1 10, 2012

Anyone fancy trying to “read DNA”? It goes something like this…01110010 01100101 01100001 01000100 00100000 01000100 01001110 01100001

By | October 1st, 2012|Categories: Uncategorized|1 Comment

George Church is one of the “godfathers of genomicsâ€*. In one of his latest publications, Next-Generation Digital Information Storage in DNA he demonstrates how to use DNA as an information storage medium. He’s not the first to do this and the supplemental information to the […]

Load More Posts