Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR) High Throughput Sequencing and Genotyping Resource Access (X01)

US Dept. of Health & Human Services: National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Note: This grant page has been archived and is very likely out of date.

Deadline: The deadline for this grant has passed

Grant amount: Unspecified amount

Fields of work: Human Genome & Genetics Diseases & Conditions

Applicant type: Government Entity, Nonprofit, For-Profit Business, Indigenous Group

Funding uses: Research

Location of project: Anywhere in the world

Location of residency: Anywhere in the world

Overview:

NOTE: Applications are accepted by continuous receipt. Applications will be reviewed no later than 120 days after receipt of the application, with one meeting in each of the following windows: September 2020; November 2020; January 2021; March 2021; May 2021; July 2021; September 2021; November 2021; January 2022; March 2022; May 2022; July 2022; September 2022; November 2022; January 2023; March 2023; May 2023; July 2023.

The Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR) high-throughput genotyping, sequencing and supporting statistical genetics services are designed to aid the identification of genes or genetic modifications that contribute to human health and disease or to enhance existing collections of well-phenotyped specimens by the addition of genotype or next-generation sequence data. The laboratory specializes in genomic services that cannot be efficiently carried out in individual investigator laboratories. CIDR provides the most up-to-date platforms, services and statistical genetic support. This is an NIH-wide initiative that is managed by NHGRI. 

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This page was last reviewed June 13, 2023 and last updated June 13, 2023