Hot air balloons flying over a mountainous landscape, reminiscent of cells rolling down a Waddington landscape

Redefining cellular reprogramming with advanced genomic technologies

  • Samantha A. Morris
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  • In this Journal Club, Nozomu Yachie recalls a 1999 paper by Pellegrini, Marcotte and colleagues that demonstrated how functional information, such as protein--protein interactions, could be revealed through patterns of genetic diversity across species.

    • Nozomu Yachie
    Journal Club
  • Microbial genomics can improve our understanding of antimicrobial resistance dynamics across ecosystems. In this Comment, Kathryn Holt emphasizes the interconnectedness of human, animal and environmental health and calls for greater integration of microbial genomic data through robust analytical frameworks to unravel the complexity of antimicrobial resistance dynamics.

    • Kathryn E. Holt
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  • In this Journal Club, Luis Orellana recalls a 2005 publication by Konstantinidis and Tiedje that introduced average nucleotide identity as a sequence-based metric to determine the relatedness between two genomes, which helped to operationally define bacterial species.

    • Luis H. Orellana
    Journal Club
Open books with long strands of DNA emerging out of the pages, representing the information provided by long-read sequencing.

Long-read sequencing

Long-read sequencing has transformed genetics and genomics. With this technology, genomic studies can illuminate previously inaccessible regions, such as repetitive DNA and large structural variants; transcriptomic studies can resolve full-length transcripts and complex isoforms; and epigenomic studies can gain additional information from directly sequencing the DNA or RNA molecule. Nature Reviews Genetics presents an online collection that showcases recent technological developments and the biological insights that have followed.
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