Searching journal content for articles similar to Meader et al. 20 (10): 1335.

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  1. ...such as compaction and accessibility, whereas endogenous DNA allows for in cellulo analysis under physiological conditions. Similarly, proteins can be purified and studied in vitro, expressed exogenously from a plasmid, or endogenously produced within the cell from genomic DNA. Although plasmid-based expression...
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  2. ...ESC contains about 110,000 miRNA molecules (Calabrese et al. 2007), comparable to measurements in other mammalian cells (Bissels et al. 2009), this suggests that the sensitivity of our method is ∼3%. We found that the miRNA composition is relatively similar across cells, showing mostly subtle differences (Fig...
  3. ...understood. Here, we use comparative genomics, expression across multiple ontogenetic stages and tissues, as well as polymorphism data to investigate MHC evolution in newts. Contrary to earlier suggestions of a massively expanded MHC in salamanders, we find that the core MHC region remains relatively compact...
  4. ...tissues because the epithelium undergoes continuous cell turnover, with a median cellular life span for differentiated cells of 4 days (Liang et al. 2017). This rapid turnover ensures that both young and aged intestines maintain similar cellular age distributions. Despite this, the Drosophila intestine...
  5. ...at Austin, Dell Pediatric Research Institute, Austin, Texas 78723, USA; 9Department of Life Sciences, School of Sciences, European University Cyprus, Nicosia 1516, Cyprus; 10Cancer Genetics, Genomics and Systems Biology Laboratory, Basic and Translational Cancer Research Center (BTCRC), Nicosia 1516, Cyprus...
  6. ...and other mammalian species remains to be characterized. Here, we address the global contribution of TEs to mammalian NF-kB binding by performing a comparative genomic analysis of TNF-induced NF-kB binding in primary human, mouse, and cow aortic endothelial cells.ResultsTransposable elements contribute...
  7. ...contributed equally to this work. Corresponding authors: ipm5219@psu.edu, izg5139@psu.eduAbstractDespite the exponential increase in sequencing information driven by massively parallel DNA sequencing technologies, universal and succinct genomic fingerprints for each organism are still missing. Identifying...
  8. ...a mammalian . Cell Syst 4: 344–356.e7. doi:10.1016/j.cels.2017.01.013 ↵Krebs AR, Imanci D, Hoerner L, Gaidatzis D, Burger L, Schübeler D. 2017. Genome-wide single-molecule footprinting reveals high RNA polymerase II turnover at paused promoters. Mol Cell 67: 411–422.e4. doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2017.06.027 ↵Kwak...
  9. ...of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA; 2Division of Medical Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA; 3Department of Statistics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA; 4Department of Genetics, Stanford University School...
  10. ...elements active in a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) that aligns with mouse or is in a state reflecting dynamic chromatin; 57,061 genomic elements found to be active in a lentivirus MPRA that tested a close to comprehensive set of predicted regulatory elements in K562 cells (Agarwal et al. 2023...
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