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Scientists Expand Entomological Research Using Genome Editing Algorithm


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tick insect on a blade of grass

The functional information of genes will be important in determining the target genes for genome editing.

Credit: Getty Images

A team of scientists from Japan's Hiroshima University, the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, and the RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences has developed an algorithm that uses genome editing to broaden entomological research.

The Fanflow4Insects workflow annotates functional information of insect genes; the researchers use it to transcribe sequence information, as well as genome and protein sequences. The team applied the algorithm to generate a functional annotation pipeline for the silkworm and the Japanese stick insect.

"Using Fanflow4Insects, we are going to annotate insects that produce useful substances," says Professor Hidemasa Bono of Hiroshima University. "The ultimate goal of this study is to make it possible to design molecular networks in insects using computer simulation."

From Hiroshima University
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Abstracts Copyright © 2022 SmithBucklin, Washington, DC, USA


 

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