Searching journal content for articles similar to Ferguson et al. 34 (4): 606.

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  1. ...; Miyauchi et al. 2020) have demonstrated that high TE content and a reduced set of plant cell wall–degrading enzymes are recurring genomic features among ECM fungi. As all known Tuberaceae species exhibit an ECM lifestyle (Bonito and Smith 2016), this family represents a valuable model for investigating...
  2. ...the new s, we show that gars have the slowest rates of genomic structural and sequence evolution of all vertebrates. In species of the two living gar genera Atractosteus and Lepisosteus, 83.35% of the s remain identical even though they diverged over 100 million years ago. Genome size variation among gars...
  3. .... briggsae strains and nine C. nigoni strains, including both reference strains. Through comparative pan-genomic analyses of both nematode species, we aim to identify the critical structural and genetic variations that drive intra- and interspecific evolution, ultimately leading to speciation...
  4. ...opportunities to uncover novel genomic and epigenomic mechanisms implicated in disease. Sequencing reads generated by LRS not only detect single nucleotide variations (SNVs) and structural variations (SVs) but also probe previously uncharacterized repetitive regions and regions with atypical GC content...
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  5. ...same amino acid occurs but is rare. Few convergent phenotypes, including echolocation or C4 carbon fixation in plants, exhibit convergent substitutions that can be deemed perfect, such that a transition to an identical amino acid is found on all branches where a transition to the new phenotype occurred...
  6. ...; and neofunctionalization, in which duplicates evolve new functions (Taylor and Raes 2004; Hahn 2009; Kondrashov 2012; Kuzmin et al. 2022). Genome sequencing has supported the view that whole- duplication (WGD) events frequently occur during evolution across all domains of life, with many plant species retaining polyploid...
  7. ...structures, methylation patterns, and transcriptional regulation associated with these loci. Our analysis revealed the extent of cis-linked genomic dysregulation resulting from HPV integration, including structural rearrangements and modulation of virus and host gene expression and epigenetic regulation...
  8. ...conservation during chromosome segregation and highly divergent DNA sequences and protein components is termed the centromere paradox (Henikoff et al. 2001; Malik and Henikoff 2009).In this review, we focus on the structure, function, and evolution of plant centromeres and draw comparisons with animal...
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  9. ...valuable in human studies to uncover genomic diversity in underrepresented populations (Sherman et al. 2019; Gao et al. 2023; Liao et al. 2023) but have also been used to reveal novel sequences associated with complex traits in livestock and agriculturally relevant plants (Gong et al. 2023...
  10. ....27% of the expressed genes generating gene–TE chimeric transcripts, including those with function affecting host preference. Our combined genomic and transcriptomic approaches provide evidence of TE-driven divergence between species, highlighting the evolutionary role of TEs in the context of host shift, a key...
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