نتایج جستجو برای: l1 retrotransposon

تعداد نتایج: 34435  

2014
Patricia E. Carreira Sandra R. Richardson Geoffrey J. Faulkner

Retrotransposons have played a central role in human genome evolution. The accumulation of heritable L1, Alu and SVA retrotransposon insertions continues to generate structural variation within and between populations, and can result in spontaneous genetic disease. Recent works have reported somatic L1 retrotransposition in tumours, which in some cases may contribute to oncogenesis. Intriguingl...

2008
Alexander Kirilyuk Genrich V. Tolstonog Annette Damert Ulrike Held Silvia Hahn Roswitha Löwer Christian Buschmann Axel V. Horn Peter Traub Gerald G. Schumann

LINE-1 (L1) is a highly successful autonomous non-LTR retrotransposon and a major force shaping mammalian genomes. Although there are about 600 000 L1 copies covering 23% of the rat genome, full-length rat L1s (L1Rn) with intact open reading frames (ORFs) representing functional master copies for retrotransposition have not been identified yet. In conjunction with studies to elucidate the role ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2006
Jinchuan Xing Hui Wang Victoria P Belancio Richard Cordaux Prescott L Deininger Mark A Batzer

Gene duplication is one of the most important mechanisms for creating new genes and generating genomic novelty. Retrotransposon-mediated sequence transduction (i.e., the process by which a retrotransposon carries flanking sequence during its mobilization) has been proposed as a gene duplication mechanism. L1 exon shuffling potential has been reported in cell culture assays, and two potential L1...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1998
Q Feng G Schumann J D Boeke

The R1Bm element, found in the silkworm Bombyx mori, is a member of a group of widely distributed retrotransposons that lack long terminal repeats. Some of these elements are highly sequence-specific and others, like the human L1 sequence, are less so. The majority of R1Bm elements are associated with ribosomal DNA (rDNA). R1Bm inserts into 28S rDNA at a specific sequence; after insertion it is...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2006
Stephane Boissinot Jerel Davis Ali Entezam Dimitri Petrov Anthony V Furano

The self-replicating LINE-1 (L1) retrotransposon family is the dominant retrotransposon family in mammals and has generated 30-40% of their genomes. Active L1 families are present in modern mammals but the important question of whether these currently active families affect the genetic fitness of their hosts has not been addressed. This issue is of particular relevance to humans as Homo sapiens...

Journal: :Methods in molecular biology 2016
Martin S Taylor John LaCava Lixin Dai Paolo Mita Kathleen H Burns Michael P Rout Jef D Boeke

The LINE-1 retrotransposon (L1) encodes two proteins, ORF1p and ORF2p, which bind to the L1 RNA in cis, forming a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex that is critical for retrotransposition. Interactions with both permissive and repressive host factors pervade every step of the L1 life cycle. Until recently, limitations in detection and production precluded in-depth characterization of L1 RNPs. Ind...

2014
R. N. Kalendar A. H. Schulman A. I. Vaido Y. J. Kim K. K. Lee J. W. Kim

Stress can induce structural changes in the brain and contribute to a variety of chronic diseases from post-traumatic stress disorder to depression. The hippocampus is a highly plastic brain region particularly susceptible to the effects of environmental stress. A genomic stress response partly consists in changes in insertion activity of transposable elements. Retrotransposons account for ~45%...

2017
Marie MacLennan Marta García-Cañadas Judith Reichmann Elena Khazina Gabriele Wagner Christopher J Playfoot Carmen Salvador-Palomeque Abigail R Mann Paula Peressini Laura Sanchez Karen Dobie David Read Chao-Chun Hung Ragnhild Eskeland Richard R Meehan Oliver Weichenrieder Jose Luis García-Pérez Ian R Adams

Mobilization of retrotransposons to new genomic locations is a significant driver of mammalian genome evolution, but these mutagenic events can also cause genetic disorders. In humans, retrotransposon mobilization is mediated primarily by proteins encoded by LINE-1 (L1) retrotransposons, which mobilize in pluripotent cells early in development. Here we show that TEX19.1, which is induced by dev...

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