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Zhang Junjie - - 2012
Research on the sequence polymorphism characteristics of key genes is important in the early identification of maize inbred lines. The See2β gene functions in remobilizing leaf nitrogen and exporting it to developing grain during foliar senescence. We analyzed See2β sequences from 49 inbred lines representing four key lines and their ...
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Nakatani Kazuhiro - - 2012
Sequence regulation of monomers is undoubtedly a challenging issue as an ultimate goal in polymer science. To produce sequence-controlled copolymers in one-pot, we herein developed the versatile tandem catalysis, which concurrently and/or sequentially involved ruthenium-catalyzed living radical polymerization and in-situ transesterification of methacrylates (monomers: RMA) with metal alkoxides (catalysts) and ...
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Tian Fang - - 2011
A multiplex polymerase chain reaction (m-PCR) assay was developed for the simultaneous detection of multiple components of genetically modified (GM) soybean. It uses two sets of primers (I, lectin1/35S/CP4; II, lectin2/35S/CP4) specific for a soybean reference gene, the 35S promoter, and an event-specific gene. Amplified fragments of 118, 414, 195, ...
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Nho Seong Won - - 2011
Although Streptococcus parauberis is known as a bacterial pathogen associated with bovine udder mastitis, it has recently become one of the major causative agents of olive flounder (Paralichthys olivaceus) streptococcosis in northeast Asia, causing massive mortality resulting in severe economic losses. S. parauberis contains two serotypes, and it is likely ...
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Huang Xue-Na - - 2011
Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) plays an important role in innate immune responses. In this report, the full-length cDNA sequence and genomic structure of Pseudosciaena crocea TLR3 (PcTLR3) were identified and characterized. The full-length cDNA of PcTLR3 was of 3384bp, including a 5'-terminal untranslated region (UTR) of 65bp, a 3'-terminal UTR ...
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Mu Changkao - - 2011
Antimicrobial peptides are important effectors in the host innate immune response against microbial invasion. In the present study, the cDNA encoding a crustin (designated CrusEs2) was cloned from Chinese mitten crab Eriocheir sinensis by using EST analysis and rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) approach. The full-length cDNA of CrusEs2 ...
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Miele Vincent - - 2011
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The number of gene sequences that are available for comparative genomics approaches is increasing extremely quickly. A current challenge is to be able to handle this huge amount of sequences in order to build families of homologous sequences in a reasonable time. RESULTS: We present the software package ...
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Ribeca Paolo - - 2011
Next-generation sequencing technologies have opened up an unprecedented opportunity for microbiology by enabling the culture-independent genetic study of complex microbial communities, which were so far largely unknown. The analysis of metagenomic data is challenging: potentially, one is faced with a sample containing a mixture of many different bacterial species, whose ...
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Su Zhenqiang - - 2011
DNA sequencing is a powerful approach for decoding a number of human diseases, including cancers. The advent of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies has reduced sequencing cost by orders of magnitude and significantly increased the throughput, making whole-genome sequencing a possible way for obtaining global genomic information about patients on whom ...
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Seth-Smith Helena - - 2011
This month's Genome Watch looks at how recombination has provided Streptococcus pneumoniae with the adaptability to overcome challenges.
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Bartram Andrea K - - 2011
Microbial communities host unparalleled taxonomic diversity. Adequate characterization of environmental and host-associated samples remains a challenge for microbiologists, despite the advent of 16S rRNA gene sequencing. In order to increase the depth of sampling for diverse bacterial communities, we developed a method for sequencing and assembling millions of paired-end reads ...
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Moyroud Edwige - - 2011
Despite great advances in sequencing technologies, generating functional information for nonmodel organisms remains a challenge. One solution lies in an improved ability to predict genetic circuits based on primary DNA sequence in combination with detailed knowledge of regulatory proteins that have been characterized in model species. Here, we focus on ...
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Nègre Nicolas - - 2011
Systematic annotation of gene regulatory elements is a major challenge in genome science. Direct mapping of chromatin modification marks and transcriptional factor binding sites genome-wide has successfully identified specific subtypes of regulatory elements. In Drosophila several pioneering studies have provided genome-wide identification of Polycomb response elements, chromatin states, transcription factor ...
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Zhang Yuanwei - - 2011
SUMMARY: High through-put deep-sequencing technology has generated an unprecedented number of expressed short sequence reads, presenting not only an opportunity but also a challenge for prediction of novel microRNAs. To verify the existence of candidate microRNAs, we have to show that these short sequences can be processed from candidate pre-microRNAs. ...
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Schloss Patrick D - - 2011
In spite of technical advances that have provided increases in orders of magnitude in sequencing coverage, microbial ecologists still grapple with how to interpret the genetic diversity represented by the 16S rRNA gene. Two widely used approaches put sequences into bins based on either their similarity to reference sequences (i.e., ...
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Harakalova Magdalena - - 2011
The costs and efforts for sample preparation of hundreds of individuals, their genomic enrichment for regions of interest, and sufficient deep sequencing bring a significant burden to next-generation sequencing-based experiments. We investigated whether pooling of samples at the level of genomic DNA would be a more versatile strategy for lowering ...
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Walters William A - - 2011
MOTIVATION: PCR amplification of DNA is a key preliminary step in many applications of high-throughput sequencing technologies, yet design of novel barcoded primers and taxonomic analysis of novel or existing primers remains a challenging task. RESULTS: PrimerProspector is an open source software package that allows researchers to develop new primers ...
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Haeussler Maximilian - - 2011
MOTIVATION: Increasing rates of publication and DNA sequencing make the problem of finding relevant articles for a particular gene or genomic region more challenging than ever. Existing text mining approaches focus on finding gene names or identifiers in English text. These are often not unique and do not identify the ...
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Agroinoculation of Nicotiana benthamiana with cloned honeysuckle yellow vein virus isolated from ...
Lee Gunsup - - 2011
A new honeysuckle yellow vein geminivirus (HYVV) isolate (2,763 nucleotides) and the HYVV-β satellite (1,227 nucleotides) from Korea were cloned and characterized from symptomatic leaves of Lonicera japonica with a yellow net mosaic appearance. Phylogenetic analysis of HYVV and 13 other begomoviruses revealed that HYVV has the highest nucleotide sequence ...
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Rödelsperger Christian - - 2011
Next-generation sequencing and exome-capture technologies are currently revolutionizing the way geneticists screen for disease-causing mutations in rare Mendelian disorders. However, the identification of causal mutations is challenging due to the sheer number of variants that are identified in individual exomes. Although databases such as dbSNP or HapMap can be used ...
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De Leeneer Kim - - 2011
This study describes how the new massive parallel sequencing technology can be implemented in a diagnostic setting for the breast cancer susceptibility genes (BRCA1 and BRCA2). The throughput was maximized by increasing uniformity in coverage, obtained by a multiplex approach, which outperformed pooling of singleplex PCRs. We evaluated the sensitivity ...
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Young Rebecca L - - 2011
As the basis for comparative biology, correctly assigning character homology is critical. Yet, identifying homologous characters in practice is often challenging. Among the major roadblocks is that the mechanistic bases of character homology remain in question. Thus, investigators must rely on several independent lines of evidence (e.g., character anatomy, phylogenetic ...
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Young Rebecca L - - 2011
As the basis for comparative biology, correctly assigning character homology is critical. Yet, identifying homologous characters in practice is often challenging. Among the major roadblocks is that the mechanistic bases of character homology remain in question. Thus, investigators must rely on several independent lines of evidence (e.g., character anatomy, phylogenetic ...
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Cardelli Maurizio - - 2011
Alu PCR is a rapid and easy-to-perform "DNA fingerprinting" technique based on the simultaneous analysis of many genomic loci flanked by Alu repetitive elements, which allows the detection of genetic polymorphisms and mutations in human and primate genomes. In the protocol described in the present chapter, two fluorochrome-labelled primers complementary ...
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Gausson Valérie - - 2011
At the current rate of technological progress, high-throughput sequencing of nucleic acids has become a commodity. These techniques are perfectly suitable for viral small RNAs sequencing and contribute to the understanding of many aspects of virus biology in the context of host-pathogen interaction. However, the generation of high quality data ...
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Hoffmann Steve - - 2011
The advent of High Throughput Sequencing (HTS) methods opens new opportunities for the analysis of genomes and transcriptomes. While the sequencing of a whole mammalian genome took several years at the turn of this century, today it is only a matter of weeks. The race towards the thousand-dollar genome is ...
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Meyer Michelle M - - 2011
Expanding DNA sequence databases and improving methods for comparative analysis are being exploited to identify numerous noncoding RNA elements including riboswitches. Ligands for many riboswitch classes usually can be inferred based on the genomic contexts of representative RNAs, and complex formation or genetic regulation subsequently demonstrated experimentally. However, there are ...
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Schwartz Schraga - - 2011
Since the emergence of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, great effort has been put into the development of tools for analysis of the short reads. In parallel, knowledge is increasing regarding biases inherent in these technologies. Here we discuss four different biases we encountered while analyzing various Illumina datasets. These biases ...
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Narina Satya S - - 2011
Anthracnose (Colletotrichum gloeosporioides) is a major limiting factor in the production of yam (Dioscorea spp.) worldwide. Availability of high quality sequence information is necessary for designing molecular markers associated with resistance. However, very limited sequence information pertaining to yam is available at public genome databases. Therefore, this collaborative project was ...
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Jeon Young Jun - - 2011
Next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods pose computational challenges of handling large volumes of data. Although cloud computing offers a potential solution to these challenges, transferring a large data set across the internet is the biggest obstacle, which may be overcome by efficient encoding methods. When encoding is used to facilitate data ...
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Ozsolak Fatih - - 2011
Methods for in-depth characterization of transcriptomes and quantification of transcript levels have emerged as valuable tools for understanding cellular physiology and human disease biology, and have begun to be utilized in various clinical diagnostic applications. Today, current methods utilized by the scientific community typically require RNA to be converted to ...
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Cook Stephanie M - - 2010
Diagnosis of turkey Eimeria infection by conventional parasitologic methods is challenging and, until now, no molecular tools existed that clearly distinguished the four widely recognized pathogenic species: Eimeria adenoeides, E. meleagrimitis, E. gallopavonis, and E. dispersa. In this study, the internal transcribed spacer region one (ITS-1) was amplified and sequenced ...
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Zhu Dianhui - - 2010
A comparison of variable regions within the 16S rRNA gene is widely used to characterize relationships between bacteria and to identify phylogenetic affiliation of unknown bacteria. In environmental studies, polymerase chain reaction amplification of 16S rRNA followed by cloning and sequencing of numerous individual clones is an extensively used molecular ...
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Sonah Humira - - 2011
A significant review of status and availability of genomic resources in horticultural crops can be utilized for the efficient exploitation of the current research in developing improved varieties and also defining future goals. In this review, we describe the current genomic resources available in major horticultural crops and utility of ...
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Gudbergsdottir Soley - - 2011
The adaptive immune CRISPR/Cas and CRISPR/Cmr systems of the crenarchaeal thermoacidophile Sulfolobus were challenged by a variety of viral and plasmid genes, and protospacers preceded by different dinucleotide motifs. The genes and protospacers were constructed to carry sequences matching individual spacers of CRISPR loci, and a range of mismatches were ...
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Pal Arnab - - 2010
Hypoxia is an integral part of tumorigenesis and contributes extensively to the neoplastic phenotype including drug resistance and genomic instability. It has also been reported that hypoxia results in global demethylation. Because a majority of the cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) islands are found within the repeat elements of DNA, and are usually ...
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Meredith Robert W - - 2011
Whales in the suborder Mysticeti are filter feeders that use baleen to sift zooplankton and small fish from ocean waters. Adult mysticetes lack teeth, although tooth buds are present in foetal stages. Cladistic analyses suggest that functional teeth were lost in the common ancestor of crown-group Mysticeti. DNA sequences for ...
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Kojima Kenji K - - 2011
Alu is a predominant short interspersed element (SINE) family in the human genome and consists of two monomer units connected by an A-rich linker. At present, dimeric Alu elements are active in humans, but Alu monomers are present as fossilized sequences. A comparative genome analysis of human and chimpanzee genomes ...
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Kuo Chih-Horng - - 2010
Pseudogenes are usually considered to be completely neutral sequences whose evolution is shaped by random mutations and chance events. It is possible, however, for disrupted genes to generate products that are deleterious due either to the energetic costs of their transcription and translation or to the formation of toxic proteins. ...
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Rothenberg S Michael - - 2010
Classical tumor suppressor gene discovery has largely involved linkage analysis and loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) screens, followed by detailed mapping of relatively large chromosomal regions. Subsequent efforts made use of genome-wide PCR-based methods to detect rare homozygous deletions. More recently, high-resolution genomic arrays have been applied to cancer gene discovery. However, accurate ...
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Aleshin Alexey - - 2010
Recently, researchers have begun to recognize that, in order to establish neutral models for disease association and evolutionary genomics studies, it is crucial to have a clear understanding of the genomic impact of nonallelic gene conversion. Drawing on previous successes in characterizing this phenomenon over protein-coding gene families, we undertook ...
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Molineris Ivan - - 2010
Processed pseudogenes are DNA sequences generated through reverse transcription (RT) and retrotransposition of mature mRNAs. These sequences are usually considered junk DNA, since in most cases they lack a suitable promoter and are no longer transcribed. Nonetheless, due to their origin, they represent a valuable source of information on the ...
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Kiesel Petra - - 2010
Alu DNA elements were long considered to be of no biological significance and thus have been only poorly defined. However, in the past Alu DNA elements with well-defined nucleotide sequences have been suspected to contribute to disease, but the role of Alu DNA element transcripts has rarely been investigated. For ...
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Liu G - - 2010
The aim of this article is to demonstrate possible recombination-associated evolutionary forces affecting the genomic distribution of processed pseudogenes. The relationship between recombination rate and the distribution of processed pseudogenes is analysed in the human genome. The results show that processed pseudogenes preferentially accumulate in regions of low recombination rates ...
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Gentsch Marcus - - 2010
Mutations that impair expression or function of the components of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase complex cause chronic granulomatous disease (CGD), which is associated with life-threatening infections and dysregulated granulomatous inflammation. In five CGD patients from four consanguineous families of two different ethnic backgrounds, we found similar genomic homozygous deletions of ...
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Brunson Tiffany - - 2010
BACKGROUND: Neutrophil cytosolic factor-1 (NCF1) is a component of NADPH oxidase. The NCF1 gene colocalizes with two pseudogenes (NCF1B and NCF1C). These two pseudogenes have a GT deletion in exon 2, resulting in a frameshift and an early stop codon. Here, we report a copy number variation (CNV) of the ...
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Xiang Shengyan - - 2010
BACKGROUND: Alu methylation is correlated with the overall level of DNA methylation and recombination activity of the genome. However, the maintenance and methylation status of each CpG site within Alu elements (Alu) and its methylation status have not well characterized. This information is useful for understanding natural status of Alu ...
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Lafontaine Ingrid - - 2010
BACKGROUND: Pseudogenes are ubiquitous genetic elements that derive from functional genes after mutational inactivation. Characterization of pseudogenes is important to understand genome dynamics and evolution, and its significance increases when several genomes of related organisms can be compared. Among yeasts, only the genome of the S. cerevisiae reference strain has ...
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Tanaka Yoshiaki - - 2010
BACKGROUND: Understanding the genome sequence-specific positioning of nucleosomes is essential to understand various cellular processes, such as transcriptional regulation and replication. As a typical example, the 10-bp periodicity of AA/TT and GC dinucleotides has been reported in several species, but it is still unclear whether this feature can be observed ...
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Belda Eugeni - - 2010
Genome reduction is a common evolutionary process in symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria. This process has been extensively characterized in bacterial endosymbionts of insects, where primary mutualistic bacteria represent the most extreme cases of genome reduction consequence of a massive process of gene inactivation and loss during their evolution from free-living ...
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