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Face-To-Face: Crude Mugshots built from DNA data alone

Face-To-Face: Crude Mugshots built from DNA data alone | Amazing Science | Scoop.it
Computer program crudely predicts a facial structure from genetic variations.


Researchers have now shown how 24 gene variants can be used to construct crude models of facial structure. Thus, leaving a hair at a crime scene could one day be as damning as leaving a photograph of your face. Researchers have developed a computer program that can create a crude three-dimensional (3D) model of a face from a DNA sample.


Using genes to predict eye and hair color is relatively easy. But the complex structure of the face makes it more valuable as a forensic tool — and more difficult to connect to genetic variation, says anthropologist Mark Shriver of Pennsylvania State University in University Park, who led the work, published today in PLOS Genetics1.


Shriver and his colleagues took high-resolution images of the faces of 592 people of mixed European and West African ancestry living in the United States, Brazil and Cape Verde. They used these images to create 3D models, laying a grid of more than 7,000 data points on the surface of the digital face and determining by how much particular points on a given face varied from the average: whether the nose was flatter, for instance, or the cheekbones wider. They had volunteers rate the faces on a scale of masculinity and femininity, as well as on perceived ethnicity.


Next, the authors compared the volunteers’ genomes to identify points at which the DNA differed by a single base, called a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). To narrow down the search, they focused on genes thought to be involved in facial development, such as those that shape the head in early embryonic development, and those that are mutated in disorders associated with features such as cleft palate. Then, taking into account the person’s sex and ancestry, they calculated the statistical likelihood that a given SNP was involved in determining a particular facial feature.


This pinpointed 24 SNPs across 20 genes that were significantly associated with facial shape. A computer program the team developed using the data can turn a DNA sequence from an unknown individual into a predictive 3D facial model (see 'Face to face'). Shriver says that the group is now trying to integrate more people and genes, and look at additional traits, such as hair texture and sex-specific differences.

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American Internet Services (AIS) Unveils BusinessCloud1 - Genome Cloud Collaboration with Diagnomics, Inc.

American Internet Services (AIS) Unveils BusinessCloud1 - Genome Cloud Collaboration with Diagnomics, Inc. | Amazing Science | Scoop.it

American Internet Services (AIS - http://tinyurl.com/d6nu895), a leading provider of enterprise-class data center, cloud and connectivity services, today announced AIS BusinessCloud1 (BC1) Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) based on the widely used VMware software suite with state-of-the-art compute and storage technology featuring Cisco, Dell, Arista and NetApp. AIS removes cost barriers so companies can quickly and efficiently migrate to the cloud by gaining access to compute and storage on demand. AIS BusinessCloud1 is San Diego's first full-featured VMware-based cloud service. AIS selected VMware for a number of reasons, among them are its widespread adoption, inherent functionality, and its robust ecosystem of support and product development.

 

Diagnomics (http://www.diagnomics.com), a provider of complete personal genome sequencing and bioinformatics solutions to biomedical researchers, has been working closely with AIS to develop a cloud-based solution for large scale, data intensive genome annotation and storage to help resolve a major bottleneck in life science research.

 

"The cloud I/O of AIS BusinessCloud1has significantly exceeded our expectations compared to a standard server cluster that is both more expensive to deploy and maintain," said Min Lee, chief executive officer at Diagnomics. "By partnering with AIS, Diagnomics has achieved flexibility that is required so that genome annotation can take the next step towards delivering on the vision of personalized medicine."

 

AIS BC1 was designed with security, performance, and redundancy in mind:

 

• No single points of failure (SPoF).Integrated VMware network and storage Quality of Service (QoS) feature set to production service standards.

• Network storage is redundant, diversified, and optimized for performance.

• Self-healing systems architecture with automated failover.

•High-speed network access provided via the AIS regional optical and transit network.

 

Some of the ways AIS BusinessCloud1 can be used include:

• As an IT Extension where a direct connection can be added to the company's current VMware infrastructure and then be managed using vCenter.


As a Hybrid Cloud Solution providing instant IT scalability with built-in firewalling, a single management console, and complete public / private network isolation. As a Zero CAPEX disaster recovery site that can mirror data between sites with full infrastructure duplication. Companies can leverage the AIS 10GigE transport to the AIS Van Buren Data Center (VBDC) in Phoenix -- considered to be one of the safest locations in the nation in terms of protection from natural disasters.

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