Search results for "COD"

showing 10 items of 2985 documents

Sequence, molecular organization and products of the Drosophila virilis homologs of the D. melanogaster nested genes lethal(2)tumorous imaginal discs…

1997

Abstract In this study, we describe the isolation of the Drosophila virilis (Dvir) 6201-bp genomic fragment homologous to a 7047-bp genomic region of D. melanogaster (Dmel) that harbors the nested genes lethal(2)tumorous imaginal discs (l(2)tid), lethal(2)neighbour of tid (l(2)not) and lethal(2)relative of tid (l(2)rot). The isolated fragment, which maps at the cytogenetic position 50A5 on chromosome 5, carries the Dvir homologs of the Dmel genes l(2)tid and l(2)not. In both cases, the interspecific comparison of the determined sequences reveals a high homology regarding the protein coding regions and a high degree of evolutionary divergence concerning the intronic parts of the genes. In th…

GeneticsbiologyIntronGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationHomology (biology)Drosophila virilisNested genechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCoding strandGeneticsMelanogasterGeneDNAGene
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Genome-Based Examination of Chlorophyll and Carotenoid Biosynthesis in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii    

2005

Abstract The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a particularly important model organism for the study of photosynthesis since this alga can grow heterotrophically, and mutants in photosynthesis are therefore conditional rather than lethal. The recently developed tools for genomic analyses of this organism have allowed us to identify most of the genes required for chlorophyll and carotenoid biosynthesis and to examine their phylogenetic relationships with homologous genes from vascular plants, other algae, and cyanobacteria. Comparative genome analyses revealed some intriguing features associated with pigment biosynthesis in C. reinhardtii; in some cases, there are additiona…

GeneticsbiologyPhysiologyMutantChlamydomonas reinhardtiiPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationIsozymeGenomechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryChlorophyllCodon usage biasGeneticsGeneFunction (biology)Plant Physiology
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2006

On the basis of their biological function, potential genetic candidates for susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis can be postulated. IFNGR1, encoding the ligand-binding chain of the receptor for interferon gamma, IFNγR1, is one such gene because interferon gamma is involved in the pathogenesis of the disease. In the coding sequence of IFNGR1, two nucleotide positions have been described to be polymorphic in the Japanese population. We therefore investigated the association of those two IFNGR1 single nucleotide polymorphisms with rheumatoid arthritis in a case-control study in a central European population. Surprisingly, however, neither position was polymorphic in the 364 individuals exami…

Geneticsmedicine.medical_specialtyImmunologyCase-control studySingle-nucleotide polymorphismBiologymedicine.diseaseRheumatologyPathogenesisRheumatologyRheumatoid arthritisInternal medicineImmunologymedicineImmunology and AllergyCoding regionInterferon gammaGenemedicine.drugArthritis Research & Therapy
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Humans and chimpanzees differ in their cellular response to DNA damage and non-coding sequence elements of DNA repair-associated genes.

2008

Compared to humans, chimpanzees appear to be less susceptible to many types of cancer. Because DNA repair defects lead to accumulation of gene and chromosomal mutations, species differences in DNA repair are one plausible explanation. Here we analyzed the repair kinetics of human and chimpanzee cells after cisplatin treatment and irradiation. Dot blots for the quantification of single-stranded (ss) DNA repair intermediates revealed a biphasic response of human and chimpanzee lymphoblasts to cisplatin-induced damage. The early phase of DNA repair was identical in both species with a peak of ssDNA intermediates at 1 h after DNA damage induction. However, the late phase differed between specie…

Genome instabilityDNA RepairPan troglodytesDNA damageDNA repairBiologychemistry.chemical_compoundExtrachromosomal DNAGeneticsCoding regionAnimalsHumansLymphocytesRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyGeneGenetics (clinical)Cells CulturedGeneticsBase SequenceDNAchemistryHuman genomeCisplatinDNADNA DamageCytogenetic and genome research
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MetaCache-GPU: Ultra-Fast Metagenomic Classification

2021

The cost of DNA sequencing has dropped exponentially over the past decade, making genomic data accessible to a growing number of scientists. In bioinformatics, localization of short DNA sequences (reads) within large genomic sequences is commonly facilitated by constructing index data structures which allow for efficient querying of substrings. Recent metagenomic classification pipelines annotate reads with taxonomic labels by analyzing their $k$-mer histograms with respect to a reference genome database. CPU-based index construction is often performed in a preprocessing phase due to the relatively high cost of building irregular data structures such as hash maps. However, the rapidly growi…

Genomics (q-bio.GN)FOS: Computer and information sciencesSource codeComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectHash functionContext (language use)MinHashcomputer.software_genreData structureHash tableComputer Science - Distributed Parallel and Cluster ComputingFOS: Biological sciencesPreprocessorQuantitative Biology - GenomicsDistributed Parallel and Cluster Computing (cs.DC)Data miningcomputermedia_commonReference genome50th International Conference on Parallel Processing
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Comparing DNA sequence collections by direct comparison of compressed text indexes

2012

Popular sequence alignment tools such as BWA convert a reference genome to an indexing data structure based on the Burrows-Wheeler Transform (BWT), from which matches to individual query sequences can be rapidly determined. However the utility of also indexing the query sequences themselves remains relatively unexplored. Here we show that an all-against-all comparison of two sequence collections can be computed from the BWT of each collection with the BWTs held entirely in external memory, i.e. on disk and not in RAM. As an application of this technique, we show that BWTs of transcriptomic and genomic reads can be compared to obtain reference-free predictions of splice junctions that have h…

Genomics (q-bio.GN)SequenceComputer sciencebusiness.industrySearch engine indexingSequence alignmentPattern recognitionConstruct (python library)Data structureBurrows-Wheeler Transform; Splice junctions; External memoryExternal memoryFOS: Biological sciencesCode (cryptography)Quantitative Biology - GenomicsBurrows-Wheeler TransformArtificial intelligencebusinessSplice junctionsAuxiliary memoryReference genome
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Statistical properties of thermodynamically predicted RNA secondary structures in viral genomes

2008

By performing a comprehensive study on 1832 segments of 1212 complete genomes of viruses, we show that in viral genomes the hairpin structures of thermodynamically predicted RNA secondary structures are more abundant than expected under a simple random null hypothesis. The detected hairpin structures of RNA secondary structures are present both in coding and in noncoding regions for the four groups of viruses categorized as dsDNA, dsRNA, ssDNA and ssRNA. For all groups hairpin structures of RNA secondary structures are detected more frequently than expected for a random null hypothesis in noncoding rather than in coding regions. However, potential RNA secondary structures are also present i…

Genomics (q-bio.GN)inverted repeatbioinformaticRNAstatistical physicsComputational biologyBiologyCondensed Matter PhysicsGenomeQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsRNA silencingViral genomesFOS: Biological sciencesCoding regionQuantitative Biology - GenomicsQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)
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Histone Code and Higher-Order Chromatin Folding: A Hypothesis

2016

AbstractHistone modifications alone or in combination are thought to modulate chromatin structure and function; a concept termed histone code. By combining evidence from several studies, we investigated if the histone code can play a role in higher-order folding of chromatin. Firstly using genomic data, we analyzed associations between histone modifications at the nucleosome level. We could dissect the composition of individual nucleosomes into five predicted clusters of histone modifications. Secondly, by assembling the raw reads of histone modifications at various length scales, we noticed that the histone mark relationships that exist at nucleosome level tend to be maintained at the high…

GenomicsSolenoid (DNA)Computational biologyChromatin remodelingArticleepigenetic regulationchemistry.chemical_compoundHistone H1super-resolution microscopyHistone methylationHistone H2ANucleosomeHistone codemeiosishistone modificationHistone octamerEpigeneticsGeneticsbiologynucleosomeFolding (DSP implementation)ChromatinHistonechemistrychromatin foldinghistone codebiology.proteinDNAchromatin organizationGenomics and computational biology
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IL-10 and TGF-β1 gene polymorphisms in Greek patients with recurrent aphthous stomatitis.

2022

Recurrent aphthous stomatitis (RAS) is one of the most frequent inflammatory disorders of the oral mucosa. Cytokines, which play an important role in RAS pathogenesis, participate directly or indirectly in normal, immunological and inflammatory processes and are secreted from cells belonging to innate and adaptive immunity as a consequence of microbial and antigenic stimuli. Gene polymorphisms in specific cytokines may predispose to RAS development. The aim of this study was the investigation and association of IL-10 and TGF-β1 gene polymorphisms with RAS.Study's cohort consisted of 60 Greek patients diagnosed with RAS, including 40 patients with minor, 10 patients with major and 10 with he…

GenotypeGreecePolymorphism Single NucleotideInterleukin-10Transforming Growth Factor beta1OtorhinolaryngologyCase-Control StudiesHumansSurgeryGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseStomatitis Aphthousrecurrent aphthous stomatitis aphthae IL-10 TGF-β gene polymorphisms oral mucosaCodonGeneral DentistryUNESCO:CIENCIAS MÉDICASMedicina oral, patologia oral y cirugia bucal
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Epidemiological study of nonsyndromic hearing loss in Sicilian newborns

2007

Deafness is caused by a variety of facts, genetic and environmental. Regarding the acquired causes, deafness can be the consequence of prenatal infections, acoustic or cerebral trauma, and the use of ototoxic drugs. Deafness can be the only manifestation (nonsyndromic forms) or it may occur together with other phenotypic findings (syndromic forms). The majority of nonsyndromicdeafness has a genetic basis [Van Camp et al., 1997]. In recent years, deafness and hearing loss have assumed a clinical importance in the study of congenital disorders [Morton et al., 1991]. The clinical interest for hearing loss is supported by the social impact that this disorder has; if not treated, delays in the d…

GenotypeHearing lossHearing Loss SensorineuralDNA Mutational AnalysisNonsense mutationBiologyGene mutationConnexinsneonate deafness geneticExonNeonatal ScreeningGene Frequencyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesGeneticsmedicineHumansGenetic TestingSicilyGeneGenetics (clinical)Chromosome 13GeneticsSplice site mutationInfant NewbornGenetic VariationStop codonConnexin 26PhenotypeMutationmedicine.symptomAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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