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Richard Durbin

Researcher at University of Cambridge

Publications -  337
Citations -  247542

Richard Durbin is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Population. The author has an hindex of 125, co-authored 319 publications receiving 207192 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard Durbin include Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute & University of Manchester.

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A conserved sequence motif in 3' untranslated regions of ribosomal protein mRNAs in nematodes.

Ashwin Hajarnavis, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2006 - 
TL;DR: Analysis of the region around the polyadenylation signal in many ribosomal protein mRNAs indicates the conservation of a sequence motif UUGUU occurring both before and immediately after the polyADS signal, suggesting that this signal may be involved in translation or other message-level regulation of ribosome genes in C. elegans.
Posted ContentDOI

Removing reference bias in ancient DNA data analysis by mapping to a sequence variation graph

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used vg to align multiple previously published aDNA samples to a variation graph containing 1000 Genome Project variants, and compared these with the same data aligned with bwa to the human linear reference genome.
Posted ContentDOI

Fast and scalable genome-wide inference of local tree topologies from large number of haplotypes based on tree consistent PBWT data structure

TL;DR: This work describes a new approach for fast and scalable generation of local tree topologies relating large numbers of haplotypes based on a data structure which it calls tree consistent, a modification of data structure introduced by R. Durbin (2014).
Posted ContentDOI

Contrasting genome dynamics between domesticated and wild yeasts

TL;DR: High-resolution view of structural dynamics uncovers that, in chromosomal cores, S. paradoxus exhibits higher accumulation rate of balanced structural rearrangements (inversions, translocations and transpositions) whereas S. cerevisiae accumulates unbalanced rearrangement more rapidly.