Searching journal content for articles similar to Kloosterman et al. 25 (6): 792.

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  1. ...emerged transcription of a pre-existing ORF. (B) De novo gene emergence from a frameshifted gene sequence. (Created with BioRender; https://www.biorender.com/.)Merging comparative genomic and transcriptomic data allow detection of both the lineage-specific transcripts and the mutations responsible...
  2. ....pantalacci@ens-lyon.fr, marie.semon@ens-lyon.frAbstractSpecies adapting to a similar lifestyle may undergo convergent changes in organ structure and cellular function, themselves relying or not on these convergent genetic changes. The extent of genomic convergence is thus debated and may further depend on the interplay between...
  3. ...1, Raony Cardenas1, Thyago Cardoso1, Luis F. Paulin2, Philippe Sanio2, Joseph Mafofo1, Haiguo Wu1, Val Zvereff1, Albarah El-Khani1, Fahed Al Marzooqi1, Tiago R. Magalhães1, Fritz J. Sedlazeck2,3,4 and Javier Quilez1 1M42, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; 2Human Genome Sequencing Center, Baylor...
  4. ...diffusion for affinity-based transition embedding (PHATE) (Moon et al. 2019), a dimensionality reduction method that preserves both local and global structure in the data, to project analyzed cells into a low-dimensional manifold. The resulting ANS score–based embeddings accurately reconstructed...
  5. ...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...
  6. ...-derived attributes, and residue-level protein characteristics such as intrinsic disorder, secondary structure, and solvent accessibility. Beyond these handcrafted features, SynMall also integrates 10 biological language models, considering their growing success in variant effect prediction tasks (Cheng et al. 2023...
  7. ...and structurally variable regions in the , shaped by a complex dynamics of host-pathogen coevolution (for review, see Radwan et al. 2020). Beyond immunological significance, the MHC has thus become a prime model in evolutionary and comparative genomics, offering insights into birth-and-death processes, concerted...
  8. ...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...
  9. ...of their strains can accurately predict intestinal diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease (Jiang et al. 2022) and is important for understanding the biological characteristics of microorganisms in general and their involvement in scenarios of clinical interest in particular (Bickhart et al. 2022; Fedarko et...
  10. ...increased, opening exciting new avenues for studying human evolution. Here, we review recent methodological advances in the study of archaic introgression. We begin by providing an overview of the genealogical and genomic signatures left behind by introgression events before reviewing recent methods...
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