Searching journal content for articles similar to Siepel 19 (10): 1693.

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  1. ...Cell-type- and chromosome-specific chromatin landscapes and DNA replication programs of Drosophila testis tumor stem cell–like cells Jennifer A. Urban1, Daniel Ringwalt1, John M. Urban2,3, Wingel Xue1,5, Ryan Gleason1, Keji Zhao4 and Xin Chen1,2 1Department of Biology, The Johns Hopkins University...
  2. ...of the structure–function relationship in lncRNAs.The discovery of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) has revolutionized scientific understanding of the and has led to an explosion of research into the complex mechanisms that regulate gene expression. Currently, lncRNAs are broadly defined as any RNA >200 nt in length...
  3. ..., University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont 05405, USA Corresponding author: jwyrick@wsu.eduAbstractUV light induces cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and other mutagenic lesions in cellular DNA. Cytosine-containing CPDs can subsequently undergo rapid deamination to uracil, a process that has been linked...
  4. ...for capturing chromatin histone modification signatures across tissue sections by taking advantage of a double-barcoded DNA arrays design compatible with in situ Protein A–transposase Tn5 tagmentation. This approach has been validated in presence of fresh-frozen mouse brain tissues but also in decalcified...
  5. ...charged DNA, promoting chromatin compaction (Luger and Richmond 1998; Robinson et al. 2008). In addition, loss of histone acetylation prevents the binding of bromodomain-containing proteins, such as TAFII1 (Jacobson et al. 2000) and BRD4 (Kanno et al. 2004), which act as transcriptional coactivators...
  6. ...) and may have a function on the RNA level (Plazzi et al. 2024) or that the DNA itself has some regulatory function as observed for mitochondrial DNA (Noutsos et al. 2007; Van Acker et al. 2023). For example, the transcription of noncoding genomic DNA is very common (Gao et al. 2020), and active...
  7. ...85721, USA Corresponding authors: rod.wing@kaust.edu.sa, jzhang@mail.hzau.edu.cn, zhoufei@mail.hzau.edu.cn, yongjunlin@mail.hzau.edu.cnAbstractTransfer of chloroplast or mitochondrial DNA into the nuclear is a common phenomenon in many species. However, little is known about the evolutionary fate...
  8. ...author: ryan.lister@uwa.edu.auAbstractIn plants, cytosine DNA methylation (mC) is largely associated with transcriptional repression of transposable elements, but it can also be found in the body of expressed genes, referred to as gene body methylation (gbM). gbM is correlated with ubiquitously expressed...
  9. ...Systems Biology of Signal Transduction, German Cancer 15 Research Center (DKFZ), 69120 Heidelberg, Germany 16 8 These authors contributed equally. Either author can be listed first. 17 * Correspondence: falk.butter@fli.de (FB) 18 19 Abstract 20 A tightly regulated DNA damage response is critical...
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  10. ...it achieves through the use of a protein-to-DNA aligner, miniprot; a chaining algorithm to generate protein sequences with high similarity to reference proteins; and postprocessing methods to identify and correct ORFs that might otherwise produce truncated proteins. Note that for noncoding genes, LiftOn uses...
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