The Department of Pathological Analyses of the College of Science of Basrah University organized an online scientific lecture on recording bacterial isolates at the Global GenBank.
The goal of the lecture was to enable researchers to record the sequences of nucleotides of the 16S rRNA gene used to diagnose bacterial isolates
The lecture was delivered by Dr. Hussein Alioui mutalib al- Dahmoshi demand from the college of Science at the University of Babel. The lecture included how to prepare the sequence file and format it for upload to the Global GenBank. It involved reading the Scones file using (Bioedit) and then making a matching using the NCBI BLAST to obtain the highest correlation with previously deposited traces and then creating a personal account for the researcher on NCBI: Then start the registration client using the GenBank:Banklt.
The lecture called for the importance of recording the sequences at GenBank so that the work of the researcher could be documented in his name and the name of his college and university.