Great work by some DNA explorers -- it seems high school students are
kicking ass all over the place. Check out this big DNA species
identification project, about 200 samples and lots of cool findings.
Even one that suggests they found a new species of cockroach!
"We identified 95 different animal species."
You probably wouldn't believe me if I told you that all of the species
displayed above were found in local supermarkets and homes in New York
City. A feather from a duster yielded Ostrich DNA. A delicacy labeled
"sturgeon caviar" instead turned out to be from the strange-looking
Paddlefish. A popular Asian snack was revealed as Giant flying squid.
Bison DNA was found in a dog biscuit.
We found DNA evidence all around us. We found DNA "name tags" in all
kinds of human and pet foods including raw, cooked, dried, and
processed items. We obtained DNA from dried soup mix, scrambled eggs,
dog food, chicken McNuggets, hamburger, beef jerky, bologna, yogurt,
cheese and even butter. By analyzing DNA, we traced tiny,
unrecognizable bits of once-living things to their source.
We could identify animals from what they left behind in the
environment. We found tell-tale DNA in dried-out horse manure in
Central Park, a pigeon feather on the sidewalk and a shed snakeskin.
Website: http://phe.rockefeller.edu/barcode/dnahouse.html
PDF of samples and results:
http://phe.rockefeller.edu/barcode/DNAHouse%20specimens,%20results.pdf
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My guess is that they extracted DNA and purified it. Then they
probably sent it out to a company to get it sequenced. It was probably
not done in-house. They said they compared the sequence to databank
sequences
>
> Does anyone know how they are getting the DNA from the samples, do they have
> a machine or are they using electrophoresis?
>
Lee do you have a citation/link for that please?
Thanks.
Lee do you have a citation/link for that please?
When the museum scientists reported a DNA sequence back to the students, they simply pasted it electronically, like a 650-letter word, into a search engine (http:///www.barcodinglife.org) that translates the species name almost instantly. The translation rests on a Rosetta Stone called BOLD.
Here is a link to the BOLD system, for making queries using DNA
sequence data from the Cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene ("COI"):
http://www.barcodinglife.org/views/idrequest.php
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