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New technology helps personalized medicine by enabling epigenomic analysis with a mere 100 cells - VT News

Lu-ZN

Virginia Tech Professor of Chemical Engineering Chang Lu, at left, and his student Zhenning Cao work in the lab. Lu is holding a microfluidic chip used in the study.

July 28, 2015    

A new technology that will dramatically enhance investigations of epigenomes, the machinery that turns on and off genes and a very prominent field of study in diseases such as stem cell differentiation, inflammation and cancer, is reported on today in the research journal Nature Methods.

VT News article

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