Searching journal content for articles similar to Rand 19 (5): 700.

Displaying results 1-10 of 6311
For checked items
  1. ...for the species). The excess of synonymous mutations observed in these NUMTs likely reflects purifying selection in the original mtDNA. Therefore, these patterns likely represent evolutionary signatures acquired prior to integration, rather than resulting from ongoing selection in the nuclear . These NUMT...
  2. ...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...
  3. ...the fact that the primordial satellite still exists, it is equally intriguing why only 15% of its sequence length has evolved into the new satellite. The proliferation of a dominant satDNA from a segment of a repetitive sequence is also demonstrated by the T. castaneum major centromeric satDNA TCAST...
  4. ...of Hymenoptera is 2.2 cM/Mb (Wilfert et al. 2007).We can learn about the forces shaping the evolution of recombination rates in general by understanding why high recombination rates have evolved in social Hymenoptera. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain this observation. One set of explanations...
  5. ...; 4Center for Genomic Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA; 5Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA; 6Broad Genomics, The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts...
  6. ...poses a significant challenge in maintaining practical performance under privacy constraints. Here, we introduce TX-Phase, a secure haplotype phasing method based on the framework of trusted execution environments (TEEs). TX-Phase allows users’ private genomic data to be phased while ensuring data...
  7. ...Sachdeva1, Brett J. Baker3,4, David F. Savage1,7,8 and Jillian F. Banfield1,4,9,10 1Innovative Genomics Institute, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA; 2Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA; 3Department of Marine Science...
  8. ...Jolla, California 92093, USA; 6J. Craig Venter Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA Corresponding authors: pkfox@ucsd.edu, Sarah@variantbio.com, kaja@variantbio.comThe importance of benefit sharing in genomic researchDespite increasing calls for benefit sharing to promote greater equity...
    OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
  9. ..., Macfarlan TS, et al. 2018. Ten things you should know about transposable elements. Genome Biol 19: 199. doi:10.1186/s13059-018-1577-z ↵Brand CL, Levine MT. 2022. Cross-species incompatibility between a DNA satellite and the Drosophila Spartan homolog poisons germline integrity. Curr Biol. 32: 2962–2971.e4...
  10. ...adaptive immunity, and MHC genes serve as key models in evolutionary genomics, offering insight into birth-and-death evolution, gene duplication, and the maintenance of genetic diversity. However, the organization and evolution of the MHC in species with giant s, such as salamanders, remain poorly...
For checked items

Preprint Server