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DNA sequencing is rewriting our understanding of historic outbreaks, but it can't tell the whole story

CN
CitrixNews Staff
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DNA sequencing is rewriting our understanding of historic outbreaks, but it can't tell the whole story
DNA molecular structure with sequencing data of human genome analysis on black background A pathogen's genome acts as a biological record of where it came from and how it spread.  (Image credit: Yuichiro Chino via Getty Images) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

Fingerprinting transformed police investigations by making it possible to place a suspect at a crime scene with physical evidence. Similarly, genome sequencing has changed how disease detectives study outbreaks by allowing them to read a pathogen's genes as a biological record of where it came from and how it spread.

One way to think about sequencing is to imagine a virus or bacteria's genome as a recipe book. Each gene is a recipe for making a protein. When scientists sequence a pathogen, they read the order of the genetic letters in those recipes.

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The top map shows the locations of the gravesites in modern-day Kyrgyzstan, with regions of Y. pestis outbreaks shaded in blue. The map on the bottom left shows tombstones, burial dates and evidence of Y. pestis infection in a part of Kara-Djigach cemetery. The map on the bottom right shows annual numbers of tombstones from the archaeological sites of Kara-Djigach and Burana. And the artifact is a tombstone from the Kara-Djigach cemetery, part of the inscription reading "This is the tomb of the believer Sanmaq. [He] died of pestilence."

(Image credit: Spyrou et al./NatureCC BY-SA) Biogen Conference Linked To 20,000 Massachusetts Coronavirus Cases - YouTube Biogen Conference Linked To 20,000 Massachusetts Coronavirus Cases - YouTube Watch On Related stories

Marc ZimmerMarc ZimmerProfessor of Chemistry, Connecticut College

Marc Zimmer is the Jean C. Tempel ’65 Professor of Chemistry at Connecticut College and the author of "The State of Science – What the future holds and the scientists making it happen" (Prometheus, 2020), "Illuminating Diseases" (Oxford, 2015); and four books for young adults. His YA book "Solutions for a Cleaner, Greener Planet" has been longlisted for the 2020 AAAS/Subaru SB&F Prize for Excellence in Science Books. His writing has appeared in USA Today and the Los AngelesTimes, and he has been interviewed and quoted in the Economist, Science and Nature. His research group uses computational methods to study bioluminescent proteins.

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Originally reported by Live Science