Difference between revisions of "Team:Uppsala/Transcriptomics/Sequencing"

Line 194: Line 194:
 
         <h1>Sequencing</h1>
 
         <h1>Sequencing</h1>
 
     </div>
 
     </div>
 +
        <!--Start of template with side picutre -->
 +
                <div class="card-holder">
 +
                    <div class="content-card-heading">
 +
                        <h2>Can remove heading if this will bein the middle of the page.</h2></div>
 +
                    <div class="content-card pic-next-to-text">
 +
                        <div class="side-text">
 +
                            <!-- Here you put your paragraphs -->
 +
                            <p>Sequencing is the final step of the journey and generally makes up a lot of different and varying methods with the common purpose of determining the primary atomic-level structure of what you’re interested in, resulting in sequences of bases making it all up. Most often this includes proteins, polymers or as in our case the keys to life: genetic material; enabling us to read it like a book of sorts.<br><br>
 +
 +
Oxford Nanopore’s MinION third generation sequencing device makes use of nano-sized holes called nanopores with an applied voltage across them. In essence: when you’re material of choice passes through one of this pores, each base fluctuates this current by a given amount which acts as a fingerprint to identify the given base.
 +
</p>
 +
                            <br>
 +
 +
                        </div>
 +
 +
                        <div class="side-img" style="background-color:darkolivegreen;">
 +
                          <!-- Here goes the big image to the right -->
 +
                          <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/3/38/T--Uppsala--MinION.jpeg" id="MinION" >   
 +
                        </div>
 +
 +
                    </div>
 
                  
 
                  
 +
                       
  
 
                
 
                
  
<p>Sequencing is the final step of the journey and generally makes up a lot of different and varying methods with the common purpose of determining the primary atomic-level structure of what you’re interested in, resulting in sequences of bases making it all up. Most often this includes proteins, polymers or as in our case the keys to life: genetic material; enabling us to read it like a book of sorts.<br><br>
+
 
+
Oxford Nanopore’s MinION third generation sequencing device makes use of nano-sized holes called nanopores with an applied voltage across them. In essence: when you’re material of choice passes through one of this pores, each base fluctuates this current by a given amount which acts as a fingerprint to identify the given base.
+
</p>
+
 
                 </div>
 
                 </div>
 
                  
 
                  

Revision as of 16:35, 15 October 2018