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Briefings in Functional Genomics and Proteomics Advance Access originally published online on June 8, 2008
Briefings in Functional Genomics and Proteomics 2008 7(3):173-174; doi:10.1093/bfgp/eln025
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Editorial

Patricia Kuwabara
Department of Biochemistry,
University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1TD, UK


E-mail: p.kuwabara@bristol.ac.uk

The first 10% of the full text of this article appears below.

It is hard to believe that 10 years have passed since the ‘essentially’ complete genome sequence of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans was published in 1998 [1]. The sequencing effort led by John Sulston and Alan Coulson at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge and Robert Waterston, then at the Genome Center in St. Louis, is acclaimed as a landmark in genomics—the first whole genome sequence of a multicellular organism. As it stands today, C. elegans remains the only multicellular organism that . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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