Feyza Yilmaz
@feyza__yilmaz
Computational Scientist, PhD
Genome Sciences
Resolving complex regions, one at a time
ID: 177395189
12-08-2010 01:07:25
54 Tweet
92 Takipçi
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NEW PAPER!!! Our study “A mechanism of gene evolution generating mucin function” is out now in Science Advances: science.org/doi/10.1126/sc… (@gokcumen, Stefan Ruhl, Biological Sciences) This thread summarizes our key findings (1/10)
Pille Hallast (Pille Hallast): Human Y chromosome - de novo assembly and comprehensive analysis of genetic variation across 45 diverse haplotypes #ASHG22 #ASHG2022
İkinci parti deprem yardımlarını ABD’de bulunduğum yerde arabaya yüklüyoruz. Yarın bunları buradaki enstitümüzde bilim insanı olan Feyza Yilmaz Boston’a @TRConsulBoston a götürecek. Haftaya yine ben gideceğim…ihtiyaçlar güncellendikçe biz de usanmadan böyle devam edeceğiz❤️🩹🇹🇷
Delighted to share that our manuscript: "High level of complexity and global diversity of the 3q29 locus revealed by optical mapping and long-read sequencing" is out in Genome Medicine genomemedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…
New research from Feyza Yilmaz Dr. Jennifer Mulle & co. The Jackson Laboratory identifying 19 novel haplotypes in the 3q29 region of the human genome, allowing clinicians to define breakpoints more accurately & conduct future genotype-phenotype association studies bit.ly/3WAQJQI
📗 New in Genome Medicine from BMC: "High level of complexity and global diversity of the 3q29 locus revealed by optical mapping and long-read sequencing" with Feyza Yilmaz, Pille Hallast, Kwondo Kim & Charles Lee: #jaxresearch doi.org/10.1186/s13073…
I am thrilled to share our study on the de novo assembly and characterisation of 43 diverse human Y chromosomes, published today in nature, together with the first #T2T Y assembly from Adam Phillippy, Arang Rhie and co-authors nature.com/articles/s4158…
I'm delighted to share that our study on the amylase locus is now published in Science Magazine! A big thanks to all the authors: Charikleia Karageorgiou, Kwondo Kim, Petar Pajic, Kendra Scheer, @christinerbeck, Ann-Marie Torregrossa, Charles Lee, Omer Gokcumen. science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…
A recent study published in Science Magazine discovered that a surge in duplication of the amylase gene during human evolution shaped our adaptation to starchy foods and may have occurred more than 800,000 years ago, long before the advent of farming. Read more in this article