Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (19)
Search Results
- 19
Academic Journals
- 19
- Search Terms:
- 1From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedThe midgut is the major organ for food digestion, nutrient absorption and also a barrier for foreign substance. The 5th-instar larval stage of silkworm is very important for larval growth, development, and silk...
- 2From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedPorphyra yezoensis Ueda is an intertidal marine red algae that has received increasing attention as a model organism owing to its important role in biological research and the agronomic industry. The two generations of...
- 3From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedAccurate functional annotation of protein sequences is hampered by important factors such as the failure of sequence search methods to identify relationships and the inherent diversity in function of proteins related at...
- 4From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedA number of empirical Bayes models (each with different statistical distribution assumptions) have now been developed to analyze differential DNA methylation using high-density oligonucleotide tiling arrays. However, it...
- 5From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedChinese sacbrood virus (CSBV) was purified from diseased insects, and its genome was cloned and sequenced. The genomic RNA of CSBV is 8863 nucleotides in length and contains a single large open reading frame encoding a...
- 6From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedMicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression posttranscriptionally. Although previous efforts have demonstrated the functional importance of target sites on miRNAs, little is known about the influence of the rest of 3'...
- 7From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedB cell development is a multistep process that is tightly regulated at the transcriptional level. In recent years, investigators have shed light on the transcription factor networks involved in all the differentiation...
- 8From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedSkeletal myogenesis depends on the strict regulation of the expression of various gene subsets. Therefore, the understanding of genome wide gene regulation is imperative for elucidation of skeletal myogenesis. In recent...
- 9From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedGenes without introns are a characteristic feature of prokaryotes, but there are still a number of intronless genes in eukaryotes. To study these eukaryotic genes that have prokaryotic architecture could help to...
- 10From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedTo understand the molecular basis of a specific plant-pathogen interaction, it is important to identify plant proteins that respond to the pathogen attack. Two sugarcane varieties, NCo376 and Ya71-374, were used in this...
- 11From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedConventionally, pathway-based analysis assumes that genes in a pathway equally contribute to a biological function, thus assigning uniform weight to genes. However, this assumption has been proved incorrect, and...
- 12From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedCastor bean and Jatropha contain seed oil of industrial importance, share taxonomical and biochemical similarities, which can be explored for identifying SSRs in the whole genome sequence of castor bean and utilized in...
- 13From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedPhycobilisome is the major light-harvesting complex in cyanobacteria and red alga. It consists of phycobiliproteins and their associated linker peptides which play key role in absorption and unidirectional transfer of...
- 14From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedMembers of the Burkholderia family occupy diverse ecological niches. In pathogenic family members, glycan-associated proteins are often linked to functions that include virulence, protein conformation maintenance,...
- 15From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedDiffuse astrocytoma of (WHO grade II) has a tendency to progress spontaneously to anaplastic astrocytoma (WHO grade III) and/or glioblastoma (WHO grade IV). However, the molecular basis of astrocytoma progression is...
- 16From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedProteomic datasets are often incomplete due to identification range and sensitivity issues. It becomes important to develop methodologies to estimate missing proteomic data, allowing better interpretation of proteomic...
- 17From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedAquaporins are multifunctional membrane channels that facilitate the transmembrane transport of water and solutes. When transmembrane mineral nutrient transporters exhibit the same expression patterns as aquaporins...
- 18From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedAccurate and efficient splicing is of crucial importance for highly-transcribed intron-containing genes (ICGs) in rapidly replicating unicellular eukaryotes such as the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We...
- 19From: Comparative and Functional Genomics. Peer-ReviewedFlatfish is famous for the asymmetric transformation during metamorphosis. The molecular mechanism behind the asymmetric development has been speculated over a century and is still not well understood. To date, none of...