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Spanning Disciplines, Advancing Knowledge Promoting Awareness, Progress, and Applications of the Human Genome Project |
Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy Human Genome Program
Human
Genome News Archive Edition |
Human Genome News, May 1992; 4(1)
Jay Russell Snoddy, a detailee from Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), was recently named the fifth member of the Human Genome Program staff of the DOE Office of Health and Environmental Research (OHER) in Germantown, Maryland. His responsibilities involve molecular and cellular biology within the DOE Human Genome Program and the Health Effects and Life Sciences Research Division; he also serves as a member of the OHER Human Genome Task Group and Health Effects Task Group.
Snoddy received his B.S. degree in 1980 from Bucknell University with honors in Biology. His Ph.D. thesis research in the laboratory of Peter Lengyel at Yale University involved genetic mapping and DNA sequencing of a family of mouse genes whose expression is strongly unregulated by interferons.
Snoddy worked for 2 years with Harinder Singh at the University of Chicago on the DNA transcription factors in B-cell lines. The primary focus of this research was somatic cell selection strategies using selectable markers under the tight transcriptional control of transcription-factor binding sites. Snoddy then joined Radomir Crkvenjakov and Radoje Drmanac in their work on sequencing by hybridization at ANL, where he designed an interface for data input and assisted in the computer-aided storage and interpretation of hybridization data.
HGMIS Staff
The electronic form of the newsletter may be cited in the following style:
Human Genome Program, U.S. Department of Energy, Human Genome News (v4n1).
Last modified: Wednesday, October 29, 2003
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