How to Use genome in a Sentence
genome
noun-
From this, the 3D structure of the genome can be mapped.
— Michael Irving, New Atlas, 11 July 2024 -
The researchers were able to get 27 genome sequences from 25 of the samples.
— Beth Mole, Ars Technica, 23 Feb. 2023 -
And yet the human genome project was just the beginning.
— The Physics Arxiv Blog, Discover Magazine, 9 Aug. 2023 -
And the platypus’s genome is even more special than that.
— Stephen C. George, Discover Magazine, 29 Aug. 2023 -
There are billions of these base pairs in the human genome.
— Manasee Wagh, Popular Mechanics, 1 Apr. 2022 -
In fact, HLAs are the most variable part of the human genome — which is by design.
— Kaitlin Sullivan, NBC News, 19 July 2023 -
The waterdog has the largest genome of any four-footed beast on Earth.
— Douglas Fox, Scientific American, 1 Feb. 2022 -
This was the first time the world had access to a piece of Neandertal genome.
— Daniela Mocker, Scientific American, 4 Oct. 2022 -
This was not an easy task; the mammoth's genome has more than 4 billion base pairs of DNA.
— Justin Klawans, theweek, 15 July 2024 -
Paabo’s team published the first draft of a Neanderthal genome in 2009.
— David Keyton, Time, 3 Oct. 2022 -
The human genome has evolved just 1 percent over the past eight million years.
— Boyce Upholt, The New Republic, 19 Sep. 2022 -
That means about 1% of the virus's genome is different from its starting point.
— Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Staff and Wire Reports, Arkansas Online, 11 Mar. 2023 -
But that wasn’t the only relevant genome change that the researchers found.
— Viviane Callier, Quanta Magazine, 30 May 2023 -
But so too will constructing the genomes of novel pathogens.
— IEEE Spectrum, 17 Feb. 2024 -
It's been there so long that the human genome has evolved to cope with the parasites, in the form of sickle cell disease.
— Abc News, ABC News, 10 Aug. 2022 -
There will always be the risk of unwanted outcomes in mucking with the genome.
— Robert Weisman, BostonGlobe.com, 12 Jan. 2023 -
After all, genomics is the study of all of an organism’s DNA: its genome.
— Eric D. Green, Scientific American, 31 Mar. 2022 -
Tishkoff says that even adding hundreds of additional genomes to the new pangenome isn’t enough.
— Byrodrigo Pérez Ortega, science.org, 10 May 2023 -
There are thousands of genes that are known to produce venom and each snake’s whole genome has tens of thousands of genes.
— Laura Baisas, Popular Science, 19 Sep. 2024 -
Since 1999, researchers have tried to sequence the genome of the Tasmanian tiger.
— Tim Newcomb, Popular Mechanics, 22 Aug. 2022 -
For context, the human genome is made of about 3 billion base pairs, and the mammoth genome has more than 4 billion.
— Lizette Ortega, Washington Post, 11 July 2024 -
Researchers compared the mammoth’s DNA to the genome of modern Asian elephants.
— Sarah Kuta, Smithsonian Magazine, 12 July 2024 -
Sinclair therefore focused on another part of the genome, called the epigenome.
— Alice Park, Time, 12 Jan. 2023 -
Pääbo sequenced the genome of the bones of a Neanderthal, the ancestor of modern-day humans.
— Bymary Kekatos, ABC News, 5 Oct. 2022 -
The team plans to first design a genome for the tiger and compare it to the dunnart, its closest living relative.
— Phillip Nieto, Fox News, 18 Aug. 2022 -
The other quarter of this man’s genome appears to be Japanese.
— Joshua Rapp Learn, Discover Magazine, 13 Feb. 2023 -
Making proteins was thought to be the genome’s primary job.
— Philip Ball, Scientific American, 14 May 2024 -
It was published in 1999, less than a year before scientists released the first draft of the human genome.
— San Diego Union-Tribune, 21 Nov. 2022 -
Kazansky’s team used ultra-fast lasers to inscribe the human genome data into voids as small as 20 nanometers (a nanometer is about one-billionth of a meter).
— Rosa Rahimi, CNN, 20 Sep. 2024 -
Kazansky and his team transcribed the human genome using ultra-fast lasers that encoded the data into tiny voids in silica as small as 20 nanometers.
— Margherita Bassi, Smithsonian Magazine, 20 Sep. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'genome.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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