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  1. ...that play important biological functions. Gene Ontology (GO) analysis of UCE-adjacent genes further confirmed that conclusion. All UCEs were commonly enriched near genes that play multiple roles in the regulation of DNA transcription and RNA synthesis. Additionally, genes near UCEs were enriched for terms...
  2. ...adaptive immunity, and MHC genes serve as key models in evolutionary genomics, offering insight into birth-and-death evolution, gene duplication, and the maintenance of genetic diversity. However, the organization and evolution of the MHC in species with giant s, such as salamanders, remain poorly...
  3. ...to a more comprehensive understanding of regulation.ResultsMultiplexed mSTARR-seq produces a genetically diverse input libraryWe extracted DNA from lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) of 25 different 1000 Genomes individuals originating from 10 different populations (Fig. 1A; Supplemental Table S1; The 1000...
  4. ...approximately once in every 4000 births (Wei et al. 2022), with a higher rate in cancer cells (Ju et al. 2015; Wei et al. 2022), leading to high NUMT diversity across the human population. The insertion of mtDNA into the nuclear can cause genomic instability via mutations or disruption of normal gene function...
  5. ...↵11 These authors contributed equally to this work. Corresponding authors: pavlopoulos@fleming.gr, izg5139@psu.eduAbstractG-quadruplex DNA structures exhibit a profound influence on essential biological processes, including transcription, replication, telomere maintenance, and genomic stability...
  6. ...the attachment (att) site, a unique location within the . The low GC content (9%) compared with the -wide average (∼50%) suggests that the DNA in this area may exhibit increased susceptibility to cleavage during processes such as excision or integration.View larger version: In this window In a new window Figure...
  7. ....pgen.1009627 DNA damage response kinetics Genome Research 9 www..org Loidl J, Mochizuki K. 2009. Tetrahymena meiotic nuclear reorganization is induced by a checkpoint kinase–dependent response to DNA damage. Mol Biol Cell 20: 2428–2437. doi:10.1091/mbc.e08-10-1058 Love MI, Huber W, Anders S. 2014. Moderated...
  8. ...GDA (Feng et al. 2021) are long-read methods that call low-frequency SNPs and can phase diverse genomic sequences: RVHaplo uses a network clustering formulation; HaploDMF uses a matrix factorization approach; CliqueSNV uses a clique-merging approach; and iGDA uses a probabilistic local haplotyping step...
  9. ...a choreography of numerous small and large RNPs; even the replication of telomeric DNA requires an RNP. All these examples are stable RNPs that exhibit specific sedimentation rates (e.g., in a sucrose gradient) based on the composition of RNA and protein. In this study, we aimed to identify RNA components...
  10. ...affinities following from differences in RNA Polymerase II kinetics owing to local GC content.Alternative splicing occurs predominantly cotranscriptionally and thus takes place in close proximity to the DNA from which the transcript originated (Reimer et al. 2021). Beyond being impacted by transcription...
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