journal
Journals Comparative and Functional Gen...

Comparative and Functional Genomics

https://read.qxmd.com/read/22792041/transposable-elements-are-a-significant-contributor-to-tandem-repeats-in-the-human-genome
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Musaddeque Ahmed, Ping Liang
Sequence repeats are an important phenomenon in the human genome, playing important roles in genomic alteration often with phenotypic consequences. The two major types of repeat elements in the human genome are tandem repeats (TRs) including microsatellites, minisatellites, and satellites and transposable elements (TEs). So far, very little has been known about the relationship between these two types of repeats. In this study, we identified TRs that are derived from TEs either based on sequence similarity or overlapping genomic positions...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22778693/intron-retention-and-te-exonization-events-in-zranb2
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sang-Je Park, Jae-Won Huh, Young-Hyun Kim, Heui-Soo Kim, Kyu-Tae Chang
The Zinc finger, RAN-binding domain-containing protein 2 (ZRANB2), contains arginine/serine-rich (RS) domains that mediate its function in the regulation of alternative splicing. The ZRANB2 gene contains 2 LINE elements (L3b, Plat_L3) between the 9th and 10th exons. We identified the exonization event of a LINE element (Plat_L3). Using genomic PCR, RT-PCR amplification, and sequencing of primate DNA and RNA samples, we analyzed the evolutionary features of ZRANB2 transcripts. The results indicated that 2 of the LINE elements were integrated in human and all of the tested primate samples (hominoids: 3 species; Old World monkey: 8 species; New World monkey: 6 species; prosimian: 1 species)...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22778692/diversity-of-eukaryotic-translational-initiation-factor-eif4e-in-protists
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rosemary Jagus, Tsvetan R Bachvaroff, Bhavesh Joshi, Allen R Place
The greatest diversity of eukaryotic species is within the microbial eukaryotes, the protists, with plants and fungi/metazoa representing just two of the estimated seventy five lineages of eukaryotes. Protists are a diverse group characterized by unusual genome features and a wide range of genome sizes from 8.2 Mb in the apicomplexan parasite Babesia bovis to 112,000-220,050 Mb in the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum micans. Protists possess numerous cellular, molecular and biochemical traits not observed in "text-book" model organisms...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22761546/global-transcriptional-analysis-of-olfactory-genes-in-the-head-of-pine-shoot-beetle-tomicus-yunnanensis
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jia-Ying Zhu, Ning Zhao, Bin Yang
The most important proteins involved in olfaction include odorant binding protein (OBP), chemosensory protein (CSP), olfactory receptor (OR), and gustatory receptor (GR). Despite that the exhaustive genomic analysis has revealed a large number of olfactory genes in a number of model insects, it is still poorly understood for most nonmodel species. This is mostly due to the reason that the small antenna is challenging for collection. We can generally isolate one or few genes at a time by means of the traditional method...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22761545/epigenetic-alterations-in-muscular-disorders
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chiara Lanzuolo
Epigenetic mechanisms, acting via chromatin organization, fix in time and space different transcriptional programs and contribute to the quality, stability, and heritability of cell-specific transcription programs. In the last years, great advances have been made in our understanding of mechanisms by which this occurs in normal subjects. However, only a small part of the complete picture has been revealed. Abnormal gene expression patterns are often implicated in the development of different diseases, and thus epigenetic studies from patients promise to fill an important lack of knowledge, deciphering aberrant molecular mechanisms at the basis of pathogenesis and diseases progression...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22745595/the-distribution-of-eif4e-family-members-across-insecta
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gritta Tettweiler, Michelle Kowanda, Paul Lasko, Nahum Sonenberg, Greco Hernández
Insects are part of the earliest faunas that invaded terrestrial environments and are the first organisms that evolved controlled flight. Nowadays, insects are the most diverse animal group on the planet and comprise the majority of extant animal species described. Moreover, they have a huge impact in the biosphere as well as in all aspects of human life and economy; therefore understanding all aspects of insect biology is of great importance. In insects, as in all cells, translation is a fundamental process for gene expression...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22745594/peanut-arachis-hypogaea-expressed-sequence-tag-project-progress-and-application
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Suping Feng, Xingjun Wang, Xinyou Zhang, Phat M Dang, C Corley Holbrook, Albert K Culbreath, Yaoting Wu, Baozhu Guo
Many plant ESTs have been sequenced as an alternative to whole genome sequences, including peanut because of the genome size and complexity. The US peanut research community had the historic 2004 Atlanta Genomics Workshop and named the EST project as a main priority. As of August 2011, the peanut research community had deposited 252,832 ESTs in the public NCBI EST database, and this resource has been providing the community valuable tools and core foundations for various genome-scale experiments before the whole genome sequencing project...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22701348/tackling-skeletal-muscle-cells-epigenome-in-the-next-generation-sequencing-era
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Raffaella Fittipaldi, Giuseppina Caretti
Recent advances in high-throughput technologies have transformed methodologies employed to study cell-specific epigenomes and the approaches to investigate complex cellular phenotypes. Application of next-generation sequencing technology in the skeletal muscle differentiation field is rapidly extending our knowledge on how chromatin modifications, transcription factors and chromatin regulators orchestrate gene expression pathways guiding myogenesis. Here, we review recent biological insights gained by the application of next-generation sequencing techniques to decode the epigenetic profile and gene regulatory networks underlying skeletal muscle differentiation...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22701347/the-stability-of-the-induced-epigenetic-programs
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria J Barrero
For many years scientists have been attracted to the possibility of changing cell identity. In the last decades seminal discoveries have shown that it is possible to reprogram somatic cells into pluripotent cells and even to transdifferentiate one cell type into another. In view of the potential applications that generating specific cell types in the laboratory can offer for cell-based therapies, the next important questions relate to the quality of the induced cell types. Importantly, epigenetic aberrations in reprogrammed cells have been correlated with defects in differentiation...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22693428/uniprimer-a-web-based-primer-design-tool-for-comparative-analyses-of-primate-genomes
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nomin Batnyam, Jimin Lee, Jungnam Lee, Seung Bok Hong, Sejong Oh, Kyudong Han
Whole genome sequences of various primates have been released due to advanced DNA-sequencing technology. A combination of computational data mining and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to validate the data is an excellent method for conducting comparative genomics. Thus, designing primers for PCR is an essential procedure for a comparative analysis of primate genomes. Here, we developed and introduced UniPrimer for use in those studies. UniPrimer is a web-based tool that designs PCR- and DNA-sequencing primers...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22693427/cytoplasmic-ribonucleoprotein-foci-in-eukaryotes-hotspots-of-bio-chemical-diversity
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carla Layana, Paola Ferrero, Rolando Rivera-Pomar
The life of an mRNA from transcription to degradation offers multiple control check points that regulate gene expression. Transcription, splicing, and translation have been widely studied for many years; however, in recent years, new layers of posttranscriptional and posttranslational control have been uncovered. They involve the regulation of the metabolism of mRNA in cytoplasmic foci. They are collections of ribonucleoprotein complexes that, in most cases, remain still uncharacterized, except the processing bodies (PBs) and stress granules (SGs), which have been studied (and reviewed) in detail...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22693426/before-it-gets-started-regulating-translation-at-the-5-utr
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Patricia R Araujo, Kihoon Yoon, Daijin Ko, Andrew D Smith, Mei Qiao, Uthra Suresh, Suzanne C Burns, Luiz O F Penalva
Translation regulation plays important roles in both normal physiological conditions and diseases states. This regulation requires cis-regulatory elements located mostly in 5' and 3' UTRs and trans-regulatory factors (e.g., RNA binding proteins (RBPs)) which recognize specific RNA features and interact with the translation machinery to modulate its activity. In this paper, we discuss important aspects of 5' UTR-mediated regulation by providing an overview of the characteristics and the function of the main elements present in this region, like uORF (upstream open reading frame), secondary structures, and RBPs binding motifs and different mechanisms of translation regulation and the impact they have on gene expression and human health when deregulated...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22693425/genome-wide-analysis-of-nucleotide-binding-site-disease-resistance-genes-in-brachypodium-distachyon
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shenglong Tan, Song Wu
Nucleotide-binding site (NBS) disease resistance genes play an important role in defending plants from a variety of pathogens and insect pests. Many R-genes have been identified in various plant species. However, little is known about the NBS-encoding genes in Brachypodium distachyon. In this study, using computational analysis of the B. distachyon genome, we identified 126 regular NBS-encoding genes and characterized them on the bases of structural diversity, conserved protein motifs, chromosomal locations, gene duplications, promoter region, and phylogenetic relationships...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22666087/human-genomic-deletions-generated-by-sva-associated-events
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jungnam Lee, Jungsu Ha, Seung-Yeol Son, Kyudong Han
Mobile elements are responsible for half of the human genome. Among the elements, L1 and Alu are most ubiquitous. They use L1 enzymatic machinery to move in their host genomes. A significant amount of research has been conducted about these two elements. The results showed that these two elements have played important roles in generating genomic variations between human and chimpanzee lineages and even within a species, through various mechanisms. SVA elements are a third type of mobile element which uses the L1 enzymatic machinery to propagate in the human genome but has not been studied much relative to the other elements...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22666086/conservation-of-the-rna-transport-machineries-and-their-coupling-to-translation-control-across-eukaryotes
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paula Vazquez-Pianzola, Beat Suter
Restriction of proteins to discrete subcellular regions is a common mechanism to establish cellular asymmetries and depends on a coordinated program of mRNA localization and translation control. Many processes from the budding of a yeast to the establishment of metazoan embryonic axes and the migration of human neurons, depend on this type of cell polarization. How factors controlling transport and translation assemble to regulate at the same time the movement and translation of transported mRNAs, and whether these mechanisms are conserved across kingdoms is not yet entirely understood...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22666085/repertoire-of-protein-kinases-encoded-in-the-genome-of-takifugu-rubripes
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
R Rakshambikai, S Yamunadevi, K Anamika, N Tyagi, N Srinivasan
Takifugu rubripes is teleost fish widely used in comparative genomics to understand the human system better due to its similarities both in number of genes and structure of genes. In this work we survey the fugu genome, and, using sensitive computational approaches, we identify the repertoire of putative protein kinases and classify them into groups and subfamilies. The fugu genome encodes 519 protein kinase-like sequences and this number of putative protein kinases is comparable closely to that of human. However, in spite of its similarities to human kinases at the group level, there are differences at the subfamily level as noted in the case of KIS and DYRK subfamilies which contribute to differences which are specific to the adaptation of the organism...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22666084/on-the-diversification-of-the-translation-apparatus-across-eukaryotes
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Greco Hernández, Christopher G Proud, Thomas Preiss, Armen Parsyan
Diversity is one of the most remarkable features of living organisms. Current assessments of eukaryote biodiversity reaches 1.5 million species, but the true figure could be several times that number. Diversity is ingrained in all stages and echelons of life, namely, the occupancy of ecological niches, behavioral patterns, body plans and organismal complexity, as well as metabolic needs and genetics. In this review, we will discuss that diversity also exists in a key biochemical process, translation, across eukaryotes...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22666083/versatility-of-rna-binding-proteins-in-cancer
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laurence Wurth
Posttranscriptional gene regulation is a rapid and efficient process to adjust the proteome of a cell to a changing environment. RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are the master regulators of mRNA processing and translation and are often aberrantly expressed in cancer. In addition to well-studied transcription factors, RBPs are emerging as fundamental players in tumor development. RBPs and their mRNA targets form a complex network that plays a crucial role in tumorigenesis. This paper describes mechanisms by which RBPs influence the expression of well-known oncogenes, focusing on precise examples that illustrate the versatility of RBPs in posttranscriptional control of cancer development...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22649283/the-role-of-translation-initiation-regulation-in-haematopoiesis
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Godfrey Grech, Marieke von Lindern
Organisation of RNAs into functional subgroups that are translated in response to extrinsic and intrinsic factors underlines a relatively unexplored gene expression modulation that drives cell fate in the same manner as regulation of the transcriptome by transcription factors. Recent studies on the molecular mechanisms of inflammatory responses and haematological disorders indicate clearly that the regulation of mRNA translation at the level of translation initiation, mRNA stability, and protein isoform synthesis is implicated in the tight regulation of gene expression...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22611337/pseudogenes
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yusuf Tutar
Pseudogenes are ubiquitous and abundant in genomes. Pseudogenes were once called "genomic fossils" and treated as "junk DNA" several years. Nevertheless, it has been recognized that some pseudogenes play essential roles in gene regulation of their parent genes, and many pseudogenes are transcribed into RNA. Pseudogene transcripts may also form small interfering RNA or decrease cellular miRNA concentration. Thus, pseudogenes regulate tumor suppressors and oncogenes. Their essential functions draw the attention of our research group in my current work on heat shock protein 90: a chaperone of oncogenes...
2012: Comparative and Functional Genomics
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