Preface/Front Matter
Abstract
The impact of these genomic resources is neither species—nor discipline —specific. Molecular understanding of model species has proven to be translatable, with insights gained in each holding promise for unraveling perplexities in all. Studies in other species ameliorate the human condition, if not by ultimately enabling better prevention, diagnoses, and treatment of human diseases, then, for example, economically, via the improvement of crops that feed the world, per bioremediation, or through the development of effective insecticides to combat infectious parasites. Furthermore, the usefulness of genomic technology is far-reaching, fueling an increasing number of studies using genomic tools and data in other fields and building bridges, most notably, to evolutionary biology and genetics.
In these pages you will find a collection of articles reprinted from the Tenth Anniversary Issue of the journal Genome Research, which report on a selection of model species’ genomes—from microbes to human—and which strive collectively to illustrate how genomic resources have made a difference
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.i-x