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Chronomic Medicine Group

Chronomic Medicine Group

Combining Genomic Medicine and Chronobiology

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  • AboutWhat is Chronomic Medicine?
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  • Open ResearchFind data and software tools we have generated
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Comparative Chronomics

Welcome to the Chronomic Medicine group website. We discover how circadian clocks contribute to genetic disease by taking a comparative biology approach. Take a look at our current projects below, find out about chronomic medicine or look through our data downloads.

About

The Chronomic Medicine group is based in the Department of Medical Genetics at the University of Cambridge and collaborates with colleagues across multiple departments. Our goal is to investigate how chronobiology impacts human health and disease. We are especially interested in the usage of chronobiology in genomic medicine; for which…Continue reading “About”

11Jul 2024

Identifying the link between the circadian clock and cardiac arrhythmia

Genomics England Research Registry ID: 431 Registered: 20/08/2020 Expert Summary The circadian clock is known to affect multiple aspects of health…

11Jul 2024
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Enrichment analysis of associated disease and circadian genes in rheumatoid arthritis

Genomics England Research Registry ID: 1090 Registered: 25/03/2024 Expert summary Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, systemic inflammatory autoimmune disease…

11Jul 202411 Jul 2024
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Showcasing the early women in genetics at Newnham College

This year Medical Genetics conference 2024 (ADMG24) was hosted at Newnham College on 1st July, and as part of the…

data

R script – Circadian Rhythm

16 Sep 2020
Many students spend hours making cartoon graphs of circadian rhythms. Recently I had a request for an R script to make a cartoon of a circadian rhythm modelled on a…
galaxy

Galaxy – Intersect Intervals

15 Sep 2020
This workflow runs intersect intervals from multiple .bed file and modifies the output to give a table with the number of cis-element counts per input. We have used this workflow…
shiny

Shiny – zebrafish photoperiod RNA-SEQ Data Browser

15 Sep 202015 Sep 2020
Go to the zebrafish diurnal expression browser... The zebrafish data browser made with David Whitmore has just been updated. This browser allows you to view the expression data for transcript…

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Find us here

The lab is based in the Department of Medical Genetics, located on level 6 of the Addenbrookes Treatment Centre.

Lab meetings are held in the School of Clinical Medicine.

Individual meetings are often held at Dr Hearn’s office in the Pightle at Newnham College

  • Newnham Walk, Cambridge, England
  • Addenbrookes Hospital, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 0GG, England
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