Searching journal content for articles similar to Swinburne et al. 16 (7): 912.

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  1. ...-type independent. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) reveals 28 that transcripts encoding proteins belonging to the same pathway often show similar 29 turnover dynamics. Furthermore, transcript isoforms exhibit distinct turnover profiles, 30 suggesting that RNA turnover plays an important role in regulating mRNA...
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  2. ...rate) and successfully transcribes the full-length RNA (i.e., processivity) (Muniz et al. 2021).Advances in biochemical and high-throughput technologies have revealed that transcription elongation rates are highly regulated (Muniz et al. 2021). For example, depletion of elongation factor Paf1C...
  3. ...-cell atlas of pigs by adding a layer of posttranscriptional regulation to the existing gene expression data, highlighting the significant role of cell type–specific 3′ UTR lengths in cell commitment and complex trait regulation.Alternative polyadenylation (APA) refers to the process by which pre-mRNA adds...
  4. ..., the maturation of pre-messenger RNA (pre-mRNA) requires splicing, polyadenylation, and release of the RNA from the chromatin template before export to the cytoplasm for translation. For many genes, the bulk of expressed RNA exists in the cytoplasm as mature mRNA, whereas nascent, intron-containing transcripts...
  5. ...cotranscriptionally. Thus, we studied A-to-I editing regulation in the context of transcription and pre-mRNA processing. We show that stimulation of transcription impacts editing levels. Activation of the transcription factor MYC leads to an up-regulation of A-to-I editing, particularly in transcripts...
  6. ...splicing (AS) and alternative cleavage and polyadenylation (APA) in humans. Yet, these studies are generally performed with mature mRNA, so they report on the outcome rather than the processes of RNA maturation and thus may overlook how variants directly modulate pre-mRNA processing. The order in which...
  7. ...authors: Michael.Jantsch@meduniwien.ac.at, Konstantin.Licht@meduniwien.ac.atAbstractPre-mRNA-splicing and adenosine to inosine (A-to-I) RNA-editing occur mostly cotranscriptionally. During A-to-I editing, a genomically encoded adenosine is deaminated to inosine by adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADARs...
  8. ...seedlings.In many organisms, including flowering plants, mCG is enriched in exons relative to introns and has been linked to exon definition during RNA splicing (Fig. 4C; Feng et al. 2010; Zemach et al. 2010). We hypothesized that mC readers may act as adaptor proteins to recruit splicing factors...
  9. ...and specific sedimentation profiles in native cell extracts and not in RNA only samples (Fig. 1B,C). These transcripts contained both lncRNAs and protein coding genes (Fig. 1D; Supplemental Fig. S1B). The distribution pattern of RNA abundance throughout the gradient was specific to each transcript, revealing...
  10. ...splicing has been linked to neurodegenerative, neurodevelopmental, and neuropsychiatric diseases (Dredge et al. 2001; Lopez Soto et al. 2019). Neuronal alternative splicing is downstream from calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMK) signaling, which regulates RNA-binding proteins both post-transcriptionally...
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