Searching journal content for articles similar to Lenain et al. 27 (10): 1634.

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  1. ...at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 43205, USA Corresponding author: Parthun.1@osu.eduAbstractA large fraction of the interacts with the nuclear periphery through lamina-associated domains (LADs), repressive regions which play an important role in organization and gene regulation across...
  2. ...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...
  3. ...approximately once in every 4000 births (Wei et al. 2022), with a higher rate in cancer cells (Ju et al. 2015; Wei et al. 2022), leading to high NUMT diversity across the human population. The insertion of mtDNA into the nuclear can cause genomic instability via mutations or disruption of normal gene function...
  4. ...−20) (see Supplemental Fig. S20).To determine implications of subcompartment switching on 3D organization, we generated 3D models (Paulsen et al. 2017) integrating Hi-C data with nuclear lamina–chromatin interactions (LADs) mapped by ChIP-seq of lamin B1 in each cell type (see Methods). The resulting models...
  5. ...DNA double-strand breaks after successive cell divisions, whereas SIPS is independent of telomere erosion and can be induced by oncogenic, oxidative, and genotoxic stress. SIPS induced by overexpression of oncogenes is commonly called oncogene-induced senescence (OIS), whereas premature senescence...
  6. ...phenomenon of a specific intron being retained in a stable nuclear RNPs.Almost all known regulatory RNAs function via forming RNA-protein complexes (RNPs). RNPs are formed through highly stable intermolecular interactions between RNA and protein(s). It is also known that RNPs form biomolecular...
  7. ...genetic interactions. As sequencing is applied to more families and other disorders, GCOD will enable detection of increasingly large, novel gene combinations, shedding light on combinatorial causes of genetic diseases.Many diseases are genetically heterogeneous such that damaging variants at different...
  8. ...). This is necessary to escape the plant immune system and to confer the ability to infect new host varieties.Recent progress in heterokaryotic fungi genomics, such as in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, has revealed extensive nuclear variations in structural and gene content (Li et al. 2019; Sperschneider et al. 2023b...
  9. ...the N2-derived strain VC2010. Moreover, genetically divergent versions of N2 have arisen over decades of research and hindered reproducibility of C. elegans genetics and genomics. Here we provide a 106.4 Mb gap-free, telomere-to-telomere assembly of C. elegans, generated from CGC1, an isogenic...
  10. ...Hadar Medini and Dan Mishmar Department of Life Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva 8410501, Israel Corresponding author: dmishmar@bgu.ac.ilAbstractInteractions between mitochondrial and nuclear factors are essential to life. Nevertheless, the importance of coordinated...
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