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

Displaying results 1-10 of 5222
For checked items
  1. ...Transposable elements contribute to the evolution of host shift–related genes in cactophilic Drosophila species Daniel Siqueira de Oliveira1,2,3, Anaïs Larue2, William Vilas Boas Nunes2, Francois Sabot4, Alejandra Bodelón5, María Pilar García Guerreiro5, Cristina Vieira2 and Claudia Marcia...
  2. ...-first” model of gene birth, according to which new genes initially acquire functionality by acting as transmembrane domains (Vakirlis et al. 2020b).State of the field and future prospectsQuestions pertaining to the origin of ORFan genes in bacteria, and the degree to which de novo gene evolution contributes...
  3. ...for the birth of lineage-specific proteins and implicate the previously unrecognized adaptive functions of L1 ORF1p.The emergence of lineage-specific proteins is important for the diversity of vertebrates. Vertebrate s contain large numbers of transposons, accounting for several percent to tens of percent...
  4. ...6BT, United Kingdom; 2Cancer Evolution and Genome Instability Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London NW1 1AT, United Kingdom; 3Cancer Research UK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, University College London Cancer Institute, London WC1E 6DD, United Kingdom; 4University College London Cancer...
  5. ...of protein birth and evolution. IGORFs could serve as starting points for de novo gene emergence or could be combined together, thus increasing protein sizes, contributing to protein modularity, and leading to more complex protein architectures. They resonate with the short protein fragments, reported so far...
  6. ...than 1400 RNA-seq experiments performed during prenatal development, in neonates, and in adults across vertebrate evolution. We find conserved sharp elevation of CMNGE after birth, including oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and mitochondrial ribosome genes, in the heart, hindbrain, forebrain...
  7. ..., Université de Lyon, Lyon 69007, France; 4Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, CNRS UMR 5558, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Villeurbanne 69622, France ↵5 These authors contributed equally to this work. Corresponding authors: domitille.chalopin-fillot@u-bordeaux.fr, sophie...
  8. ...Evolution of -wide methylation profiling technologies Carolina Montano1,2 and Winston Timp1 1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA; 2Division of Human Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia...
    OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
  9. ...Dynamic evolution of satellite DNAs drastically differentiates the s of Tribolium sibling species Damira Veseljak, Evelin Despot-Slade, Marin Volarić, Lucija Horvat, Tanja Vojvoda Zeljko, Nevenka Meštrović and Brankica Mravinac Ruđer Bošković Institute, Division of Molecular Biology, HR-10000...
  10. ...and epigenetic structure for the observed accelerated rates of evolution within and between species, including the role of recombination.Monocentric satellite array architectureDiverse plant species display a monocentric architecture, with a single chromosome constriction observed at metaphase, which contains...
    OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
For checked items

Preprint Server