Searching journal content for articles similar to Cahill et al. 31 (11): 2035.

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  1. ..., compression, classification, and simulation of genomic data with several worldwide whole data sets from both humans and canids, and evaluate the performance of the proposed applications with and without ancestry conditioning. The unsupervised setting of autoencoders allows for the detection and learning...
  2. ...disomy (UPD) of specific chromosomes or chromosomal regions (i.e., mice that inherit two maternal copies and no paternal copies, or vice versa, of a chromosome or part of a chromosome) have helped further define the genomic regions involved in this phenomenon. These studies identified several genomic...
  3. ...understood. Here, we use comparative genomics, expression across multiple ontogenetic stages and tissues, as well as polymorphism data to investigate MHC evolution in newts. Contrary to earlier suggestions of a massively expanded MHC in salamanders, we find that the core MHC region remains relatively compact...
  4. ...in influencing human reproductive evolution and adaptive phenotypic innovations driven by sexual and natural selection, with low pleiotropy as a selective advantage.The imperfection of DNA replication serves as a source of variations for evolution and biodiversity (Nei 2013). Such genetic variations underpin...
  5. ..., Carlsson AS, Ceplitis A, Crossa J, et al. 2024. Genomic selection in plant 567 breeding: Key factors shaping two decades of progress. Molecular Plant 17: 552–578. 568 Azodi CB, Tang J, Shiu S-H. 2020. Opening the Black Box: Interpretable Machine Learning for 569 Geneticists. Trends in Genetics 36: 442...
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  6. ...).Researchers have historically identified adaptively introgressed regions using outlier-based approaches (Racimo et al. 2015; Edelman and Mallet 2021), conducting -wide scans for positive selection and introgression, and then intersecting outlier regions to identify candidates. However, the genomic signature...
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  7. ...equally to this work. Corresponding author: sgillett@cornellcollege.eduAbstractGenome-wide association studies (GWASs) and expression analyses implicate noncoding regulatory regions as harboring risk factors for psychiatric disease, but functional characterization of these regions remains limited. Here...
  8. ...of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA Corresponding author: ee3@uw.eduAbstractTBC1D3 is a primate-specific gene family that has expanded in the human lineage and has been implicated in neuronal progenitor proliferation and expansion of the frontal cortex. The gene family and its expression have been...
  9. ...in 422 gene regulation (Creyghton et al., 2010; Barski et al., 2007). Our study revealed a significant 423 increase in H3K27ac activity in 1,539 genomic regions, indicative of gene activation. 424 Conversely, the upregulation of H3K27me3 in 795 regions suggests transcriptional 425 suppression...
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  10. ...@tamu.edu, jje@uci.eduAbstractMany essential functions of organisms are encoded in highly repetitive genomic regions, including histones involved in DNA packaging, centromeres that are core components of chromosome segregation, ribosomal RNA comprising the protein translation machinery, telomeres that ensure...
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