John Murray
@jisaacmurray.bsky.social
460 followers 260 following 8 posts
Associate Professor of Genetics, University of Pennsylvania. Genomics of development, gene regulation, C. elegans.
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jisaacmurray.bsky.social
Yay thank you for all of your amazing work and for sharing this fabulous news!
jisaacmurray.bsky.social
I think everyone is certain what the number is. Not sure the number they are certain about is the same though…
Reposted by John Murray
jisaacmurray.bsky.social
Worm25 has been absolutely fantastic so far-congrats to everyone for your amazing work! One striking change in the talks this year is it seems like the consensus number of neurons in the adult hermaphrodite has returned to 302 after a few years at 300. Is CAN back?
jisaacmurray.bsky.social
I won’t summary all the results here but interesting variation across cell types in the degree of conservation, examples of heterochronic evolution, and insight into the expression fate of duplicated genes.
jisaacmurray.bsky.social
These two species have nearly identical lineages despite having genome sequences nearly as different as human and chicken. This allowed us to explore by single cell RNA-seq how progenitor and terminal cell types vary in the same cell across this long evolutionary distance.
Reposted by John Murray
erichmschwarz.bsky.social
After 5 years, our team has a new telomere-to-telomere gap-free reference genome for C. elegans. We published our first results in 2019; I thought we'd have our loose ends wrapped up by spring 2020. That prediction was ... slightly off.
But here's the genome now!
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
CGC1, a new reference genome for Caenorhabditis elegans
The original 100.3 Mb reference genome for Caenorhabditis elegans , generated from the wild-type laboratory strain N2, has been crucial for analysis of C. elegans since 1998 and has been considered co...
www.biorxiv.org
Reposted by John Murray
ctmurphy1.bsky.social
My first Bluesky paper post! I’m pleased to announce the publication of our single-nucleus atlas of adult neurons from wild-type and long-lived, better performing insulin receptor (daf-2) mutants, by Jon St. Ange and Yifei Weng et al.DOI: 10.1016/j.xgen.2024.100720
Reposted by John Murray
patrickphillips.bsky.social
A reminder for new folks. BlueSky does not have an algorithm to raise posts of interest. It is incumbent upon you to do so via reposting. Liking things only provides feedback to the poster but does not promote the post. The signal to noise ratio is taking a brief beating, so great to help curate.