Searching journal content for articles similar to Zhou et al. 18 (9): 1446.

Displaying results 1-10 of 1737
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. ..., the clearest one against GA-rich repeats in the human . However, our study reveals a systematic failure of both technologies to sequence and assemble specific exons of Drosophila melanogaster genes, indicating an overlooked limitation. Namely, multiple Y-linked exons are nearly or completely absent from raw...
  3. ..., the Polycomb landscape of differentiated cell types remains unexplored. Differentiated cells comprise the majority of the gut epithelium and directly impact both tissue and whole organismal aging. Using single-cell chromatin profiling of the Drosophila intestine, we identify cell type–specific chromatin...
  4. ...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...
  5. ...in tandem for ∼100–110 times (Lifton et al. 1978; Strausbaugh and Weinberg 1982). Each unit is ∼5 kb in length, and this tandem organization is present in distantly related Drosophila species, indicating old evolutionary origins (Kakita et al. 2003). In contrast, Stellate is a D. melanogaster...
  6. ...in Drosophila melanogaster, much less is known about the origin and evolution of piCs in this or any other species. To investigate piC origin and evolution, we use a population genomic approach to compare piC activity and sequence composition across eight geographically distant strains of D. melanogaster...
  7. ...that seen in primates (three- to eightfold) (Taylor et al. 2006; Arnheim and Calabrese 2009; Ségurel et al. 2014). Direct observation of sex differences in mutation rate has not been reported previously for Drosophila, as other studies have not assigned mutations to the parent of origin. However, Schrider...
  8. ...this information to divide the Drosophila into five chromatin types, each originally labeled with a different color (Filion et al. 2010). These include three heterochromatin-like states (repressive chromatin [BLACK], Polycomb group [PcG] heterochromatin [BLUE], and centromeric chromatin [GREEN]) and two...
  9. ...are tightly controlled, raising the possibility that their breakdown products, tsRNAs, may provide a link between the overall translational status of a cell to specific changes in gene regulatory network. We hypothesize that Drosophila pupation, being a special developmental stage during which...
  10. ...eukaryotic transposons, into naive lines of Drosophila erecta. We monitored the invasion in three replicates for more than 50 generations by sequencing the genomic DNA (using short and long reads), the small RNAs, and the transcriptome at regular intervals. A piRNA-based host defense was rapidly established...
For checked items

Preprint Server