In a paper published today in Sciences Advances, researchers in the Department of Chemistry and the Department of Physics & Astronomy at the University of California, Irvine revealed new details about a key enzyme that makes DNA sequencing possible. The finding is a leap forward into the era of personalized medicine when doctors will be able to design treatments based on the genomes of individual patients.
"Enzymes make life possible by catalyzing chemical transformations that otherwise would just take too long for an organism," said Greg Weiss, UCI professor of chemistry and a co-corresponding author of the new study. "One of the transformations we're really interested in is essential for all life on the planet -- it's the process by which DNA is copied and repaired."
To read more, click here.