Pseudogenes
-
Subject Areas on Research
- 50 million years of genomic stasis in endosymbiotic bacteria.
- A yeast artificial chromosome contig encompassing the type 1 neurofibromatosis gene.
- Comparative genomics search for losses of long-established genes on the human lineage.
- Conservation of Y-linked genes during human evolution revealed by comparative sequencing in chimpanzee.
- Decay of mutualistic potential in aphid endosymbionts through silencing of biosynthetic loci: Buchnera of Diuraphis.
- Domain II of calmodulin is involved in activation of calcineurin.
- Evolution of the trnF(GAA) gene in Arabidopsis relatives and the brassicaceae family: monophyletic origin and subsequent diversification of a plastidic pseudogene.
- Finishing the euchromatic sequence of the human genome.
- Genetic elucidation of human hyperosmia to isovaleric acid.
- Identification and mapping of type 1 neurofibromatosis (NF1) homologous loci.
- Identification of a structurally distinct CD101 molecule encoded in the 950-kb Idd10 region of NOD mice.
- Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse genome.
- Lack of genomic imprinting of DNA primase, polypeptide 2 (PRIM2) in human term placenta and white blood cells.
- NF1-related locus on chromosome 15.
- Nucleotide sequence, expression, and chromosomal mapping of Mrp and mapping of five related sequences.
- Organization of the human zeta-crystallin/quinone reductase gene (CRYZ).
- Parallel acceleration of evolutionary rates in symbiont genes underlying host nutrition.
- The DNA sequence and biological annotation of human chromosome 1.
- The human olfactory transcriptome.
- The male-specific region of the human Y chromosome is a mosaic of discrete sequence classes.
- The western painted turtle genome, a model for the evolution of extreme physiological adaptations in a slowly evolving lineage.
- Using secondary structure to identify ribosomal numts: cautionary examples from the human genome.
-
Keywords of People
- Muir, Kelly Walton, Associate Professor of Ophthalmology, Ophthalmology, Glaucoma