Searching journal content for articles similar to Kaiser et al. 31 (11): 1994.

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  1. ...impact on reference bias, variant-calling accuracy, and computational performance across multiple samples, sequencing coverages, and referencepanels, comparedwith commonlyused linear andpan-based methods. Results Overview of impute-first alignment workflow and personalization The impute-first framework...
  2. ...that impact gene regulatory networks related to critical brain-functions. Because the liver is a key organ for nutrient conversion and detoxification, it is also possible that higher rates of liver-biased TE-CRE evolution (compared to the brain) reflect adaptive evolution of liver function as a response...
  3. ...contributed equally to this work. Corresponding authors: thomas.near@yale.edu, clad@ihb.ac.cn, yangliandong1987@163.comAbstractGenomic evolution can propel and restrict species diversification. Rapid molecular evolution and genomic rearrangement is often associated with increased species diversification...
  4. ...and gastrointestinal tracts and to associated organs including the liver and pancreas. We used functional genomic approaches to identify highly conserved endodermal cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) functioning across the 400 million years of evolution separating zebrafish and humans. Our analyses suggest...
  5. ...Rearrangements of viral and human s at human papillomavirus integration events and their allele-specific impacts on cancer regulation Vanessa L. Porter1,2,3, Michelle Ng1,3, Kieran O'Neill1, Signe MacLennan1,2,3, Richard D. Corbett1, Luka Culibrk1,4, Zeid Hamadeh5,6, Marissa Iden7,8, Rachel Schmidt...
  6. ...of both elements. Our goals were to elucidate their coevolutionary signatures and assess the 117 impact of TEs on gene regulation and structural variation, thereby advancing our 118 understanding of genomic evolution in ruminants (Fig. 1). 119 Results 120 The KZFP catalog and TE composition in ruminants...
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  7. ...-associated proteins and does not negatively impact histone modification ChIP-seq results, using double cross-linked cells for both target types offers a feasible and consistent protocol for experiments involving CRs, TFs, and histone marks.Identification of optimal conditions for genomic mapping of nonhistone DNA...
  8. ...and Jonas Paulsen1 1Department of Biosciences, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, University of Oslo, 0316 Oslo, Norway; 2Department of Genome Sciences, The John Curtin School of Medical Research, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia; 3...
  9. ...Cell type–specific gene regulatory atlas prioritizes drug targets and repurposable medicines in Alzheimer's disease Yunxiao Ren1,2, Ming Hu3,4, Yang E. Li5, Andrew A. Pieper6,7,8,9,10,11, Jeffrey Cummings12 and Feixiong Cheng1,2,4,13 1Cleveland Clinic Genome Center, Cleveland Clinic Research...
  10. ...learning models are promising tools to expand our understanding of regulatory genomics and to interpret variant functional impact (Zhou and Troyanskaya 2015; Avsec et al. 2021a,b). However, our results show they are currently limited by the limited scope of their training sequences, which largely reflect...
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