Searching journal content for articles similar to Gimelbrant and Chess 16 (6): 723.

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  1. ...insertions that influence gene regulation. In line with this, Gillard et al. (2021) recently reported that TE insertions in promoters were associated with regulatory divergence of gene duplicates following WGD in salmonid fish. However, systematic investigations into the role of TEs in CRE evolution...
  2. ...-nucleus multiome sequencing to capture transcriptomic and epigenetic profiles from 40,125 cells across the lifespan of the mouse substantia nigra. Our analysis pinpoints age-associated changes at a cell type– specific level, revealing a subset of genes that increasingly express with age and are enriched in PD...
  3. ...focused on proliferation, whereas those associated with decreased gene expression included factors related to maturation and cardiac function, validating the immature state driven by GSK3i (Fig. 1C,D; Supplemental Table S2). Next, we identified TFs that may drive the alterations in cCRE activity and gene...
  4. ...single-gene RNAPII elongation rate estimates, we implemented several improvements in our computational pipeline, including relying on wave front estimation as described above. Additionally, several other new method features, such as improved background correction and the removal of PCR duplicates, also...
  5. ...demonstrate that gene expression changes during HNSCC progression can be comodulated by alterations in both copy number and chromatin activity, driving epigenetic rewiring of cell states. Furthermore, intratumor epigenetic heterogeneity (ITeH) may predispose subclonal populations within the primary tumor...
  6. ...-copy state, a high fraction of teleost genes remain in two copies, called ohnologs. For instance, 26% of all zebrafish genes are still retained as duplicated ohnologs (Howe et al. 2013). Evidence suggests that TGD duplicates have been involved in the evolution of innovations (Zakon et al. 2006; Moriyama et...
  7. ...) and genes. The shaded areas indicate an inactive gene (purple) and an active gene (blue). The promoter of the silent Camkk1 gene on the left is an example of an unmethylated CGI serving as a PRC2 nucleation site resulting in an H3K27me3 peak. (B) Mass spectrometry (MS) analysis of H3K27 and H3K36...
  8. ...; Maeda et al. 2018). Genomic analyses of AMF have revealed contents of repetitive sequences ranging from 23% to 43% (Chen et al. 2018a; Morin et al. 2019). These repeats consist of transposable elements (TEs) and expanded gene families that occasionally form tandemly repeated arrays of duplicate genes...
  9. ...to the diagonal line indicate colinearity between the two assemblies. (B) Gene completeness assessment based on BUSCO analysis of Tcas5.2 and TcasONT assemblies using insect universal orthologs. The analysis was expressed as absolute numbers for complete and single-copy, complete and duplicated, fragmented...
  10. ...is at the310 TSS and the immediately surrounding area, and the other is just downstream of the TSS.311 Figure 8: Example of epigenetic states and imputation results for a single gene, Pkd2. The legend for each panel is displayed to its right. (A) The variance in DO gene expression explained at each position...
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