[QSB-grads] QSB Seminar this Friday @ 1:30 pm in SSM 104 - Rob Phillips from Caltech
Frederick Wolf
fwolf at ucmerced.edu
Wed Feb 21 19:29:08 PST 2018
The ability to read the DNA sequences of different organisms has transformed biology in much the same way that the telescope transformed astronomy. And yet, much of the sequence found in these genomes is as enigmatic as the Rosetta Stone was to early Egyptologists. I will begin by showing how simple tools from statistical physics can be used to predict the level of expression of different genes, followed by a description of precision measurements used to test those predictions. With those results in hand, I will then describe unexpected ways of using the physics of information transfer first developed at Bell Labs for thinking about telephone communications to try to decipher the meaning of the regulatory features of genomes. Specifically, I will show how we have been able to explore genes for which we know nothing about how they are regulated by using a combination of mutagenesis, deep sequencing and the physics of information, with the result that we now have falsifiable hypotheses about how those genes work.
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Fred W Wolf, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Natural Sciences / UC Merced
5200 N. Lake Rd. Merced, CA 95343
415.370.1132
fwolf at ucmerced.edu
http://faculty.ucmerced.edu/fwolf/
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