LabLynx Wiki

LabLynx Wiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

LIMSpec Wiki

LIMSpec Wiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

Bioinformatics Wiki

Bioinformatics Wiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

IHE Wiki

IHE Wiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

HL7 Wiki

HL7 Wiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

Clinfowiki

Clinfowiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

OpenWetWare

OpenWetWare

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

Statistical Genetics Wiki

Statistical Genetics Wiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

Cloud-Standards.org

Cloud-Standards.org

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

WikiBooks

WikiBooks

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

LIMSwiki

LIMSwiki

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

Wikiversity

Wikiversity

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.

Wikipedia

Wikipedia

A biobank (biorepository or tissue bank) is a repository of human biological material — organs, tissue, blood, cells and other body fluids — that contains at least traces of DNA or RNA that would allow genetic analysis. It originally referred to large population banks of human tissue and related data.