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Yao Qingxia - - 2012
Here we describe the cloning and expression of Pekin duck IL-10 (duIL-10) and a six exon-five intron structure of an IL-10 gene. Two transcripts encoding duIL-10 with an alternately spliced 3'UTR, and a transcript lacking exon 5 with a novel coding sequence for its C-terminus (duIL-10ΔE5) were isolated from splenocytes. ...
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Di Cesare Angela - - 2012
Capillaria aerophila, a trichuroid nematode causing pulmonary infections in wild and domestic carnivores, is an occasionally and potentially poorly recognized infections of humans due to clinico-pathological mimicry and a lack of accurate, robust laboratory diagnostics. The present work evaluated the efficiency of a DNA based assay amplifying partial cytochrome c ...
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Sze Marc A - - 2012
BACKGROUND: Based on surface brushings and BAL fluid Hilty, et al. demonstrated microbiomes in the human lung characteristic of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which have now been confirmed by others. The present study extends these findings to human lung tissue samples. METHODS: DNA from lung tissue samples ...
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Zhang Ai-Ling - - 2012
Antizyme 1 (AZ1) is a member of the antizyme family that is involved in many biological processes. As a natural inhibitor, AZ1 controls the normal level of polyamines, which is indispensable to cellular function. Our prior research showed that the expression of the AZ1 gene in Longissimus doris of Landrace ...
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Chan Calvin C - - 2012
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Ribonuclease 8 is a member of the RNase A family of secretory ribonucleases; orthologs of this gene have been found only in primate genomes. RNase 8 is a divergent paralog of RNase 7, which is lysine-enriched, highly conserved, has prominent antimicrobial activity, and is expressed in both normal ...
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Young Neil D - - 2012
Schistosomiasis is a neglected tropical disease caused by blood flukes (genus Schistosoma; schistosomes) and affecting 200 million people worldwide. No vaccines are available, and treatment relies on one drug, praziquantel. Schistosoma haematobium has come into the spotlight as a major cause of urogenital disease, as an agent linked to bladder ...
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Ataya Farid S - - 2012
Superoxide dismutase (SOD) is the first line of defense against oxidative stress induced by endogenous and/or exogenous factors and thus helps in maintaining the cellular integrity. Its activity is related to many diseases; so, it is of importance to study the structure and expression of SOD gene in an animal ...
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Gee M - - 2012
Bidirectional non-protein-coding RNAs are ubiquitously transcribed from the genome. Convergent sense and antisense transcripts may regulate each other. Here, we examined the convergent cis-noncoding rRNAs (nc-rRNAs) in A5 and E9 lung cancer models. Sense nc-rRNAs extending from rDNA intergenic region to internal transcribed spacer of around 10 kb in length were ...
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García Alfredo - - 2012
The current study describes the recovery of Helcococcus ovis from an adult female Verata breed goat that was euthanized because of respiratory problems and emaciation. At necropsy, the affected animal showed a purulent bronchopneumonia with scattered pulmonary abscesses and fibrous pleural adhesions. A Gram-positive, catalase-negative, coccus-shaped bacterium was isolated from ...
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Gleeson Ricky - - 2011
Three new species of Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 are described from the gall-bladders of two species of carcharhinid sharks collected off Heron and Lizard Islands on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Ceratomyxa carcharhini n. sp. and C. melanopteri n. sp. are described from Carcharhinus melanopterus (Quoy & Gaimard), and Ceratomyxa negaprioni ...
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Raharivololoniaina Liliane - - 2011
Kankana manampoka n. gen., n. sp. (Monogenea, Polystomatidae), is described from the urinary bladder of the narrow-mouthed frog Platypelis pollicaris. This is the first record of a polystome from the Microhylidae and the third polystome genus from Madagascar, next to Metapolystoma and Madapolystoma. The extensive uterus and presence of hamuli ...
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Chen Yu-Hua - - 2011
OBJECTIVE:: The goal of this study was to extend the known repertoire of microRNAs (miRNAs) expressed in urothelial bladder cancer (BCa) of the Chinese population and further understand the molecular events of miRNAs underlying urothelial bladder tumorigenesis at the global genome level. MATERIALS AND METHODS:: We separated well-characterized epithelial tumor ...
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Rafnar Thorunn - - 2011
Three genome-wide association studies in Europe and the USA have reported 8 urinary bladder cancer (UBC) susceptibility loci. Using extended case and control series and 1000 Genomes imputations of 5,340,737 SNPs, we searched for additional loci in the European GWAS. The discovery sample set consisted of 1,631 cases and 3,822 ...
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Karlsbakk Egil - - 2011
Sigmomyxa sphaerica (Thélohan, 1892) gen. n. (Myxozoa, Myxosporea) with myxosporean stages in the gall bladder of Belone belone (L.) (Teleostei, Belonidae) uses the polychaete Nereis pelagica L. (Nereidae) from shallow water in the northern Øresund, Denmark, as invertebrate host. The nearly spherical tetractinomyxon-type actinospores of S. sphaerica differ from those ...
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Shayan P - - 2011
We used the PCR technique based on the abovementioned primer pair and sequencing to demonstrate the Theileria infection in the sheep samples collected from Sultanate of Oman. According to the frame work of "integrated control of ticks and tick borne diseases in globalized world managed by EU-ICTTD-3 project, the samples ...
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Hao Dacheng - - 2011
Taxus mairei is a critically endangered and commercially important cultured medicinal gymnosperm in China and forms an important medicinal resource, but the research of its genome is absent. In this study, we constructed a T. mairei fosmid library and analyzed the fosmid end sequences to provide a preliminary assessment of ...
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Yeku Oladapo - - 2011
Rapid Amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) provides an inexpensive and powerful tool to quickly obtain full-length cDNA when the sequence is only partially known. Starting with an mRNA mixture, gene-specific primers generated from the known regions of the gene and non-specific anchors, full-length sequences can be identified in as little ...
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Salimullah Md - - 2011
Cap analysis gene expression (CAGE) is a method to identify the 5' ends of transcripts, allowing the discovery of new promoters and the quantification of gene activity. Combining promoter location and their expression levels, CAGE data are essential for annotation-agnostic studies of regulatory gene networks. However, CAGE requires large amounts ...
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Fussner Eden - - 2011
Eukaryotic genomes must be folded and compacted to fit within the restricted volume of the nucleus. According to the current paradigm, strings of nucleosomes, termed 10nm chromatin fibers, constitute the template of transcriptionally active genomic material. The majority of the genome is maintained in a silenced state through higher-order chromatin ...
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Eren A Murat - - 2011
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is an enigmatic disease of unknown origin that affects a large percentage of women. The vaginal microbiota of women with BV is associated with serious sequelae, including abnormal pregnancies. The etiology of BV is not fully understood, however, it has been suggested that it is transmissible, and ...
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Petrov Dmitri A - - 2011
Transposable elements (TEs) are the primary contributors to the genome bulk in many organisms and are major players in genome evolution. A clear and thorough understanding of the population dynamics of TEs is therefore essential for full comprehension of the eukaryotic genome evolution and function. Although TEs in Drosophila melanogaster ...
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Senti Kirsten-André - - 2010
Throughout the eukaryotic lineage, small RNA silencing pathways protect the genome against the deleterious influence of selfish genetic elements such as transposons. In animals an elaborate small RNA pathway centered on PIWI proteins and their interacting piRNAs silences transposons within the germline. In contrast to other small RNA silencing pathways, ...
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Wang Xuying - - 2010
Cosuppression is a silencing phenomenon triggered by the introduction of homologous DNA sequences into the genomes of organisms as diverse as plants, fungi, flies, and nematodes. Here we report sex-induced silencing (SIS), which is triggered by tandem integration of a transgene array in the human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. A ...
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Vermeersch Leen - - 2010
Endogenes rarely support transitive silencing, whereas most transgenes generally allow the spread of silencing to occur along the primary target. To determine whether the presence of introns might explain the difference, we investigated the influence of introns in the primary target on 3'–5' silencing transitivity. When present in a transgene, ...
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Mockett Robin J - - 2010
The simultaneous overexpression of multiple copies of Mn superoxide dismutase (SOD) and ectopic catalase (mtCat) transgenes in the mitochondria of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, was shown previously to diminish the life span. The hypothesis tested in this study was that this effect was due primarily to the presence of ...
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Schetelig Marc F - - 2011
Transposon-based vectors currently provide the most suitable gene transfer systems for insect germ-line transformation and are used for molecular improvement of the Sterile Insect Technique. However, the long time stability of genome-integrated transposon constructs depends on the absence of transposase activity that could remobilize the transposon-embedded transgenes. To achieve transgene ...
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Rhee Yong - - 2010
Plants regenerated from tissue culture often display somaclonal variation, that is, somatic and often meiotically heritable phenotypic variation that can result from both genetic and epigenetic modifications. To better understand the molecular basis of somaclonal variation, we have characterized four unique tissue culture-derived epialleles of the pericarp color1 (p1) gene ...
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Coors Marilyn E - - 2010
A flood of comparative genomic data is resulting in the identification of human lineage-specific (HLS) sequences. As apes are our closest evolutionary relatives, transgenic introduction of HLS sequences into these species has the greatest potential to produce 'humanized' phenotypes and also to illuminate the functions of these sequences. We argue ...
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Blow Matthew J - - 2010
Accurate control of tissue-specific gene expression plays a pivotal role in heart development, but few cardiac transcriptional enhancers have thus far been identified. Extreme noncoding-sequence conservation has successfully predicted enhancers that are active in many tissues but has failed to identify substantial numbers of heart-specific enhancers. Here, we used ChIP-Seq ...
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Shwed Philip S - - 2010
The multicopy λgt10-lacZ transgene shuttle vector of Muta™Mouse serves as an important tool for genotoxicity studies. Here, we describe a model for λgt10-lacZ transgene molecular structure, based on characterisation of transgenes recovered from animals of our intramural breeding colony. Unique nucleotide sequences of the 47 513 bp monomer are reported with ...
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An alignment-free method to identify candidate orthologous enhancers in multiple Drosophila genomes.
Arunachalam Manonmani - - 2010
Evolutionarily conserved non-coding genomic sequences represent a potentially rich source for the discovery of gene regulatory region such as transcriptional enhancers. However, detecting orthologous enhancers using alignment-based methods in higher eukaryotic genomes is particularly challenging, as regulatory regions can undergo considerable sequence changes while maintaining their functionality. We have developed ...
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Boy Aurelia L - - 2010
The fruit fly Drosophila is a leading model system for the study of transcriptional control by cis-regulatory elements or enhancers. Here, we present a rapid and highly efficient system for the large-scale analysis of enhancer elements, site-specifically integrated into the Drosophila genome. This system, which is scalable for either small ...
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Dalakouras Athanasios - - 2011
Previously, we had shown that stable expression of a hairpin RNA sharing homology with the coat protein (CP) of the Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) (hpRNA(CMV)) produced CMV resistant Nicotiana tabacum plants. However, only 17% of the hpRNA(CMV)-expressing plants generated substantial amounts of siRNAs that mediated CMV resistance (siRNAs(CMV)). Here, we ...
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Stefan Alessandra - - 2010
Silencing of the lacZ gene in Escherichia coli was attempted by means of the expression of antisense RNAs (asRNAs) in vivo. A short fragment of lacZ was cloned into the pBAD expression vector, in reverse orientation, using the EcoRI and PstI restriction sites. This construct (pBAD-Zcal1) was used to transform ...
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Valkov Vladimir T - - 2011
Transformation of potato plastids is limited by low transformation frequencies and low transgene expression in tubers. In order to improve the transformation efficiency, we modified the regeneration procedure and prepared novel vectors containing potato flanking sequences for transgene integration by homologous recombination in the Large Single Copy region of the ...
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Kvam Erik - - 2010
Soluble antibody fragments are desirable not only as potential therapeutic and diagnostic agents for extracellular targets but also as 'intrabodies' for functional genomics, proteomics and gene therapy inside cells. However, antibody fragments are notoriously aggregation-prone when expressed intracellularly, due in part to unfavorable redox potential and macromolecular crowding in cell ...
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Rao Arvind - - 2010
Gene regulation in eukaryotes involves a complex interplay between the proximal promoter and distal genomic elements (such as enhancers) which work in concert to drive precise spatio-temporal gene expression. The experimental localization and characterization of gene regulatory elements is a very complex and resource-intensive process. The computational identification of regulatory ...
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Fahim Muhammad - - 2010
Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV), vectored by Wheat curl mite, has been of great economic importance in the Great Plains of the United States and Canada. Recently, the virus has been identified in Australia, where it has spread quickly to all major wheat growing areas. The difficulties in finding adequate ...
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Weinthal Dan - - 2010
Gene targeting is a powerful tool for functional gene studies. However, only a handful of reports have been published describing the successful targeting of genome sequences in model and crop plants. Gene targeting can be stimulated by induction of double-strand breaks at specific genomic sites. The expression of zinc finger ...
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McGaughey David M - - 2010
Zebrafish transgenesis is a powerful and increasingly common strategy to assay vertebrate transcriptional regulatory control. Several challenges remain, however, to the broader application of this technique; they include increasing the rate with which transgenes can be analyzed and maximizing the informational value of the data generated. Presently, many rely on ...
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Li Xian-Wen - - 2010
In present research, the full-length cDNA and the genomic sequence of a novel cold-regulated gene, CsCOR1, were isolated from Camellia sinensis L. The deduced protein CsCOR1 contains a hydrophobic N-terminus as a signal peptide and a hydrophilic C-terminal domain that is rich in glycine, arginine and proline. Two internal repetitive ...
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Cho S J - - 2010
Somatic cells from a first-generation red fluorescence protein transgenic cat (first RFP TG cat) were used to produce a recloned RFP transgenic cat (Re-RFP TG cat) (Felis catus) that systemically expressed RFP. A total of 281 RFP cloned embryos were transferred into 13 surrogate mothers (mean=21+/-7.7 embryos/recipient). One surrogate cat ...
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Punnamoottil Beena - - 2010
Hox genes are key regulators of anterior-posterior axis patterning and have a major role in hindbrain development. The zebrafish Hox4 paralogs have strong overlapping activities in hindbrain rhombomeres 7 and 8, in the spinal cord and in the pharyngeal arches. With the aim to predict enhancers that act on the ...
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Gantier Michael P - - 2010
Short-interfering RNAs (siRNAs) have engendered much enthusiasm for their ability to silence the expression of specific genes. However, it is now well established that siRNAs, depending on their sequence, can be variably sensed by the innate immune system through recruitment of toll-like receptors 7 and 8 (TLR7/8). Here, we aimed ...
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Le Saux Agnès - - 2010
This paper reports our attempts to characterize transgene integration sites in transgenic mouse lines generated by the microinjection of large (from 30 to 145 kb) pig DNA fragments encompassing a mammary specific gene, the whey acidic protein gene (WAP). Among the various methods used, the thermal asymmetric interlaced (TAIL-) PCR ...
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Featherstone Karen - - 2010
During immunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) V(D)J recombination, D to J precedes V to DJ recombination in an ordered manner, controlled by differential chromatin accessibility of the V and DJ regions and essential for correct antibody assembly. However, with the exception of the intronic enhancer Emu, which regulates D to J ...
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Beltran Adriana S - - 2010
Chromatin structure plays a pivotal role in defining which regions of the genome are accessible for effective transcription. Chromatin-remodeling agents are able to relax this structure, facilitating the access of transcription factors into the DNA. Herein, we describe a new method, which combines artificial transcription factors (ATFs) and chromatin-remodeling agents ...
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Jeong Yongsu - - 2010
Six1, which belongs to the sine oculis homeobox (Six) protein family, is an evolutionarily conserved transcription factor found in diverse organisms ranging from flatworms to humans. Six1 is expressed in various tissues including the nervous system during ontogenesis and has been implicated in cell differentiation, morphogenesis, and organogenesis of the ...
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Mishiba Kei-ichiro - - 2010
A novel transgene silencing phenomenon was found in the ornamental plant, gentian (Gentiana triflora x G. scabra), in which the introduced Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter region was strictly methylated, irrespective of the transgene copy number and integrated loci. Transgenic tobacco having the same vector did not show the ...
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Hu Hae-Jin - - 2010
Alternative splicing is a main component of protein diversity, and aberrant splicing is known to be one of the main causes of genetic disorders such as cancer. Many statistical and computational approaches have identified several major factors that determine the splicing event, such as exon/intron length, splice site strength, and ...
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