Posts Tagged ‘psychencode’
Single-cell genomics of autism
May 18, 2019Evaluation of chromatin accessibility in prefrontal cortex of individuals with schizophrenia | Nature Communications
April 7, 2019The highly pleiotropic gene SLC39A8 as an opportunity to gain insight into the molecular pathogenesis of schizophrenia – Costas – 2018 – American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics – Wiley Online Library
April 7, 2019https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ajmg.b.32545
assoc w. SCZ+Chron’s
protective to Parkinson’s
Genome-wide de novo risk score implicates promoter variation in autism spectrum disorder. – PubMed – NCBI
April 7, 2019Human Cell Atlas Method Development Community timeline
April 6, 2019neuroDEVELOPMENTS: Neuroscience Research to Clinical Relevance
March 31, 2019https://mailchi.mp/add7f814b67d/neurodevelopments-720229
https://www.libd.org/neurodevelopments/
the Lieber’s neuroDEVELOPMENTS newsletter, which features the PsychENCODE paper
Final Article — American Scholar Magazine
March 12, 2019WORKS IN PROGRESS – SPRING 2019
Decoding DNA
On the hunt for the genetic roots of mental illnesses
By Marcus Banks | March 4, 2019
QT:[[”
The model, a form of artificial intelligence, aims to use abstract knowledge gained in the research lab to improve clinical treatments for real patients. The ultimate goal, says Gerstein, is to use the model to develop pharmaceutical treatments that reduce the impact of schizophrenia. Part of the challenge in developing drugs to treat the disease is the fact that it is not a one-size-fits-all condition. “]]
Read Light Up Your Imagination Argus Large Poster by Trend Enterprises: Language Arts: K12SchoolSupplies.net
February 15, 2019The effects of death and post-mortem cold ischemia on human tissue transcriptomes | Nature Communications
February 2, 2019Changes in gene activity may one day reveal…time of death
https://www.ScienceMag.org/news/2018/02/changes-gene-activity-may-one-day-reveal-time-death-crime-victims Discusses paper by @RodericGuigo (“Effects of death & post-mortem cold ischemia on….#transcriptomes,”
https://www.Nature.com/articles/s41467-017-02772-x). Obvious forensic interest but maybe a #privacy angle as well
Changes in gene activity may one day reveal the time of death for crime victims
Flexible statistical methods for estimating and testing effects in genomic studies with multiple conditions
December 25, 2018seems to be better for eQTLs
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-018-0268-8