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Magazine: Genomic projects exploit scale as clinical applications play catch-up

Pharmaceutical Technology

The last few months have marked the publication of research emerging from projects designed to collect and analyse genomic data on a wider scale than was previously thought possible. The post Magazine: Genomic projects exploit scale as clinical applications play catch-up appeared first on Pharmaceutical Technology.

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A new dawn of the genomic age: five areas set to be transformed in 2023

pharmaphorum

2022 was a banner year for genomics. In March, the collaborative T2T consortium published the first complete telomere-to-telomere sequence of the human genome, filling in the last 8% of the 3 billion base pairs that make up our DNA.

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Why genomic healthcare data matters in the development of new therapies 

Drug Discovery World

Genomic healthcare data is critical to identify disease risk, ancestry, traits and response to medicines and aids in the development of new targeted therapies – precision medicines. DDW’s Megan Thomas observes developments of accessibility in this sector and the potential impact. . The origins . The current landscape .

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As the Smithsonian wraps a landmark genome exhibit, leaders in the field reflect on what’s changed

STAT News

When the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History opened its genomics exhibit in 2013, the field was just celebrating the 10th anniversary of the completed Human Genome Project. Sequencing that first genome cost over $500 million. The genomes since cost $10,000. Read the rest…

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Seqera Labs partners with Genomics England to enhance genomic research capabilities

Drug Discovery Today

BARCELONA/LONDON, 25.05.23: Seqera Labs, the leading provider of secure workflow orchestration software in the life sciences sector, has partnered with Genomics England, the government-owned company that launched the 100,000 Genomes Project in partnership with the NHS.

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Open Source “Wikipedia” for Drug Discovery

Pharma Mirror

Open source drug discovery will allow more efficient, predicable, and cost-effective development of drugs that work as advertised, with fewer side effects. In 2003 the Human Genome Project provided the first atlas. The post Open Source “Wikipedia” for Drug Discovery appeared first on Pharma Mirror Magazine.

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Genomics England will move HQ to Canary Wharf’s new biocluster

pharmaphorum

Canary Wharf’s bid to become a new hub for the life sciences sector in the UK has been given a boost following the decision by Genomics England to relocate to the development. The new building is just the first project for the initiative, located on a 3.3

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