Searching journal content for articles similar to Cooper et al. 14 (4): 539.

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  1. ...'Donnell et al. 2023). We consider TL as yet another genomic variant, albeit one that is dynamic and complex, but its diversity within the species has not yet been investigated in depth. Exploring and characterizing TL distributions in natural strains would expand our understanding of telomere regulation...
  2. ...to quantify genomic convergence while controlling for species relatedness and age of transition.Life in arid environments has been studied in a variety of mammalian clades. Multiple adaptations enable species to cope with temperature and seasonal unpredictability and with challenges to food and water...
  3. ...such as compaction and accessibility, whereas endogenous DNA allows for in cellulo analysis under physiological conditions. Similarly, proteins can be purified and studied in vitro, expressed exogenously from a plasmid, or endogenously produced within the cell from genomic DNA. Although plasmid-based expression...
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  4. ...for genomic data. Integrated into diverse architectures such as convoluted neural networks (CNNs), long short-term memory (LSTM), dilated CNNs, and transformers, ConvNeXt V2 blocks consistently improve performance, leading to similar prediction accuracy across these different model types. This reveals...
  5. ...). One key insight from comparative studies is that the well-characterized genomic organization seen in mice and humans (the long-standing gold standard for MHC genomic research) is actually a derived state, specific to placental mammals. In humans, the MHC spans 4–5 Mb and contains well over 200 genes...
  6. ...sizes and the constraints of bulk sequencing.In this study, we aim to systematically characterize the landscape of TE-chimeric transcripts and their clinical relevance in pancreatic cancer using large-scale patient-derived organoid and bulk sample cohorts. Our objective is to clarify the potential...
  7. ...explosion: Given that each human typically contains 40,000 to 200,000 variants at <0.5% minor allele frequency (MAF) (The 1000 Genomes Project Consortium 2015), an analysis of all possible rare variant pairs yields between 8 billion to nearly 20 trillion combinations per individual, necessitating a priori...
  8. ...), metabolic and regulatory changes during this wintering adaptation remain largely unknown.Dehnel's phenomenon corresponds to the unique physiological constraints shrews face. S. araneus have one of the highest mammalian metabolic rates measured to date (Genoud et al. 2018), requiring high and constant food...
  9. ...University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA; 4Institute for Genomic Diversity, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA; 5Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA; 6Center for Quantitative Genetics and Genomics, Aarhus University, Aarhus 8000...
  10. ..., and abundance are not yet fully disclosed (Nachtergaele and He 2017). Studies in mammalian cells have already characterized more than 170 RNA modifications, highlighting the presence of modified bases in many RNA classes, including mRNAs, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), tRNAs, and rRNAs (Nombela et al. 2021...
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