february, 2020
Event Details
https://cbiit.webex.com/recordingservice/sites/cbiit/recording/92da1e2fd87a4d2ca91d0a3a1a3bad0c https://btep.ccr.cancer.gov/wp-content/uploads/Sridhar_CCR-Ed-0220.pptx The functions of only a minority of genes in any species is known. And even in those cases the functional annotation is highly incomplete and largely devoid of
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Event Details
https://cbiit.webex.com/recordingservice/sites/cbiit/recording/92da1e2fd87a4d2ca91d0a3a1a3bad0c
https://btep.ccr.cancer.gov/wp-content/uploads/Sridhar_CCR-Ed-0220.pptx
The functions of only a minority of genes in any species is known. And even in those cases the functional annotation is highly incomplete and largely devoid of context. At an even more fundamental level, how can we know whether a gene serves any relevant biological function in a given context? In this informal presentation we will discuss a few vignettes related to the broad questions of context-specific functions of genes, in a variety of contexts from bacterial response to drugs, normal tissues, and cancer.
Time
(Thursday) 11:00 am - 12:00 pm
Organizer
BTEPBioinformatics Training and Education Program, CCR, NCIncibtep@nih.gov