Searching journal content for articles similar to Wallace et al. 17 (11): 000.

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  1. ...of how animals fight 32 infections. 33 Key words 34 Drosophila immunity/Immune-responsive enhancer/STARR-seq 35 36 Running Title 37 Genome-wide survey of fly immune enhancers 38 39 Introduction 40 When encountering pathogenic microbes, animals must regulate an effective immune response 41 to survive...
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  2. ...), Ziller et al. (2015) demonstrated that even lower per-sample coverage (5–15×) can be sufficient to detect regional methylation differences between groups, especially when using more replicates.Data storage challengesThe storage and retention of raw sequencing data presents significant challenges for LRS...
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  3. ...305-0074, Japan; 2Plant Immunity Research Group, RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science, Tsurumi-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa 230-0045, Japan Corresponding authors: skato@riken.jp, mohkuma@riken.jpAbstractGenome sequences provide fundamental information for both basic and applied life sciences. Whole...
  4. ...to precisely capture nucleosome and TF occupancy simultaneously at a high resolution across the entire within a single assay. As such, existing approaches have only been able to ascertain chromatin structure at the level of accessible versus inaccessible regions, or with respect to individual factors using...
  5. ...-seq reads and bias in the peak calling is a potential issue. We therefore assessed the level of multimapped ATAC-seq reads in TEs versus other genomic regions for one of the brain samples. This analysis showed that -wide multimapping levels were 14%, whereas reads mapping to TEs from larger subfamilies...
  6. ...-in orientations in vitro (Song et al. 2011, 2014). However, to what extent nucleosomes modulate CPD deamination in other sequence contexts and across the of intact cells remains unclear.Genome-wide sequencing methods have emerged as powerful tools to understand how different genomic and chromatin contexts impact...
  7. ...heterozygous and homozygous, depending on the chromosome (Supplemental Table S4; Fig. 3). We observed more heterozygous than homozygous centromeres. Note that because of their location and probably because of their sequence content, centromeric regions were poorly covered with SNP information in several cases...
  8. ...equally to this work. Corresponding author: sgillett@cornellcollege.eduAbstractGenome-wide association studies (GWASs) and expression analyses implicate noncoding regulatory regions as harboring risk factors for psychiatric disease, but functional characterization of these regions remains limited. Here...
  9. ...window Figure 2. Genome-wide diversity and differentiation for common voles, M. arvalis, from the Orkney archipelago (brown) versus continental individuals (green). Density distributions (top) and Manhattan plots (bottom) for π, Tajima's D, and FST in 50 kb windows along the . Different chromosomes...
  10. ...as a major contributing caller to reach final consensus calls by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) PanCanAtlas project (Ellrott et al. 2018), across approximately 13,000 tumor samples, and the International Cancer Genome Consortium Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (ICGC-PCAWG) initiative (The ICGC/TCGA Pan...
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