Jeffrey Zheng
Professor, Yunnan University, China
Title: DNA sequences of multiple species of soil bacteria on variant maps
Biography
Biography: Jeffrey Zheng
Abstract
From a suffix -omics viewpoint, there are hierarchical relationships among genomics, proteomics and metabolomics. Typically 40 million bacterial cells are in a gram of soil and a million bacterial cells in a milli litre of fresh water. There are approximately 5×1030 bacteria on Earth, forming a biomass which exceeds that of all plants and animals. The DNA of most bacteria is contained in a single circular molecule called the bacterial chromosome. The chromosome, along with several proteins and RNA molecules, forms an irregularly shaped structure called the nucleoid. This sits in the cytoplasm of the bacterial cell. In this keynote, multiple species of soil bacteria are selected to measure their DNA sequences using variant construction to form variant maps to generate various statistical probability distributions under a list of controllable parameters. Under this mechanism, it is possible to generate multiple feature distributions from Fock, sub-Poissonian to Poissonian, normal distributions using multiple random resources: Quantum random sequences, DNA sequences, cryptographic sequences, ECG signal sequences,etc. under controllable phase spaces in clusters. This powerful visual and control mechanism are useful to make proper simulation and computation tools and packages in advanced metabolomics applications.