Rodelsperger, C.; Krawitz, P.; Bauer, S.; Hecht, J.; Bigham, A. W.; Bamshad, M.; de Condor, B. J.; Schweiger, M. R.; Robinson, P. N.: Identity-by-descent filtering of exome sequence data for disease-gene identification in autosomal recessive disorders. Bioinformatics 27 (6), pp. 829 - 36 (2011)
Schweiger, M. R.; Kerick, M.; Timmermann, B.; Isau, M.: The power of NGS technologies to delineate the genome organization in cancer: from mutations to structural variations and epigenetic alterations. Cancer Metastasis Reviews 30 (2), pp. 199 - 210 (2011)
Kerick, M.; Timmermann, B.; Schweiger, M. R.: High-throughput sequencing of frozen and paraffin-embedded tumor and normal tissue. Pathologe 31 (suppl 2), pp. 255 - 257 (2010)
Boerno, S. T.; Grimm, C.; Lehrach, H.; Schweiger, M.-R.: Next-generation sequencing technologies for DNA methylation analyses in cancer genomics. Epigenomics 2 (2), pp. 199 - 207 (2010)
Schweiger, M.-R.; Lehrach, H.: From Bench to Bedside: New Technologies for Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment. Journal of International Biotechnology Law 5 (2), pp. 82 - 84 (2008)
Schweiger, M.-R.: The interaction between the papillomaviral protein E2 and the cellular bromodomain protein Brd4 is important for the viral life cycle and viral oncogenesis. Dissertation, Freie Universität, Berlin (2008)
Schweiger, M.-R.: Translationale molekulare Medizin: Die Entschlüsselung der Genetik und Epigenetik von monogenetischen sowie komplexgenetischen Erkrankungen durch moderne Hochdurchsatz-Sequenziertechnologien. Habilitation (2012)
Cassandra Extavour is a developmental biologist and a professor of molecular and cell biology at Harvard. On the occasion of her talk at our institute in May, we interviewed her about her scientific journey, inclusion in academia, and how her second career as a part-time soprano singer shapes her scientific work. The interview was conducted by…
Alexander Meissner and Aydan Bulut-Karslioglu from Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics participate in a new cluster of excellence: ImmunoPreCept.
An international team of scientists from the MPIMG, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein (UKSH) and the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance (SDWA) have decoded the nearly complete genome of the northern white rhinoceros.