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Comparative chronomics

Comparative chronomics

Comparative biology of circadian clocks from plants to fish

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  • AboutWhat is comparative chronomics?
    • Chronomic medicine
  • ProjectsDiscover the current projects we are working on
  • Group MembersView previous and current lab members
  • PublicationsView recent publications
  • Training and toolsAccess resources and sessions we have run
    • Tools
    • 100,000 genomes basic trainingFiles and tutorial from BSGM 2019

Comparative Chronomics

Welcome to the comparative chronomics group website. We discover how circadian clocks work in different species by taking a comparative biology approach. Take a look at our current projects below, find our about chronomic medicine or look through our data downloads.

About

The Comparative Chronomics group is based in the Department of Medical Genetics at the University of Cambridge and collaborates with colleagues across multiple departments. Comparative chronomics is the study of the diversity of biological clocks between species, individuals and systems. We utilise genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics to make comparisons between systems.…Continue reading “About”

16Sep 201916 Sep 2019
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Comparative Chrono | Genomics

Comparing clock architecture between individuals and species

15Sep 201915 Sep 2020
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PharamacoCHRONomics (Chrono – PGx)

Working with colleagues in Cambridge University Hospitals we are merging chronobiology and pharmacogenomics to deliver Chrono-PGx. Current projects include identifying…

15Sep 201916 Sep 2019
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Comparative Chrono | Physiology

Comparing physiology between species to find shared mechanisms

galaxy

Galaxy – Genome motif plotter to bed file

15 Sep 2020
Workflow for identifying the locations of promoter motifs and exporting to bed file. View on usegalaxy.eu
data

Data – Circadian Cis-Element Bed Files

15 Sep 202015 Sep 2020
This download contains the unsorted .bed files for the known circadian cis-elements across the human genome. The methodology used to generate these files in Galaxy can be downloaded from our…
pre-print

Pre Print – A systematic review of utilisation of diurnal timing information in clinical trial design for Long QT syndrome

15 Sep 2020
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.07.23.20160978v1 This pre-print is Lydia's work identifying the use of timing information into clinical trials for cardiac arrhythmias

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Find us here

The lab is based in the Department of Medical Genetics.

Meetings are held in Murray Edwards College. To arrange a meeting please email Tim:

tjh70@cam.ac.uk

Murray Edwards College
CB3 0DF
Department of Medical Genetics,
University of Cambridge,
Addenbrooke’s Treatment Centre
Cambridge Biomedical Campus
CB2 0QQ
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