Захарова поинтересовалась возможностью посмотреть «Терминатора» в Молдавии14:59
Что думаешь? Оцени!
。快连下载-Letsvpn下载对此有专业解读
Discover all the plans currently available in your country,更多细节参见体育直播
Although many scientists today assume that Sanger was the first to figure out how to sequence DNA, that’s not the case. As with RNA, Sanger was edged out by a Cornell biochemist. This time it was Ray Wu, who, in 1970, published a method to “read” specific sections of two bacterial virus genomes, called λ and bacteriophage 186. Wu’s method was only capable of sequencing “cohesive ends,” short single-stranded sections of these particular phage genomes, and so wasn’t considered a “general” solution to the DNA sequencing problem. In 1974, Wu’s lab refined this technique into the first general sequencing method, but it proved extremely labor-intensive and failed to catch on.