Research Techniques Made Simple: Bacterial 16S Ribosomal RNA Gene Sequencing in Cutaneous Research - ScienceDirect
16S rRNA microbiome protocol for Illumina iSeq 100 – EzBioCloud Help center
ASM sur Twitter : "This review in #ClinMicroRev #ASMClinMicro describes the use of Sanger 16S rRNA gene sequencing for routine identification of bacteria in the clinical microbiology lab. https://t.co/vRKHwiLNhr https://t.co/Xy2t2Kub7z" / Twitter
16S sequencing and analysis
A method for high precision sequencing of near full-length 16S rRNA genes on an Illumina MiSeq [PeerJ]
CloVR-16S | CloVR
16S rRNA Gene Sequencing as a Clinical Diagnostic Aid for Gastrointestinal-related Conditions | bioRxiv
The effect of taxonomic classification by full-length 16S rRNA sequencing with a synthetic long-read technology | Scientific Reports
Performance and Application of 16S rRNA Gene Cycle Sequencing for Routine Identification of Bacteria in the Clinical Microbiology Laboratory | Clinical Microbiology Reviews
Frontiers | Comparison of Two 16S rRNA Primers (V3–V4 and V4–V5) for Studies of Arctic Microbial Communities
A 16S rRNA gene sequencing and analysis protocol for the Illumina MiniSeq platform - Pichler - 2018 - MicrobiologyOpen - Wiley Online Library
Research Techniques Made Simple: Bacterial 16S Ribosomal RNA Gene Sequencing in Cutaneous Research. - Abstract - Europe PMC
Retrieval of a million high-quality, full-length microbial 16S and 18S rRNA gene sequences without primer bias | Nature Biotechnology
16S rRNA Sequencing: Identifying Bacterial Species by PCR | Microbiology | JoVE
Flowchart depicting the “16S rRNA analysis” protocol. The protocol... | Download Scientific Diagram
16S rRNA sequencing is the most common method used to analyze the... | Download Scientific Diagram
Full-length 16S rRNA gene amplicon analysis of human gut microbiota using MinION™ nanopore sequencing confers species-level resolution | BMC Microbiology | Full Text
Research Techniques Made Simple: Bacterial 16S Ribosomal RNA Gene Sequencing in Cutaneous Research - ScienceDirect