Publications by authors named "Nicholas Rohr"

Article Synopsis
  • Serotonin, a neurotransmitter produced from tryptophan, plays multiple roles in regulating bodily functions like sleep, appetite, and anxiety, and is linked to Alzheimer's disease and various psychiatric disorders.
  • It helps neurons to develop and adapt, and recent studies show that serotonin is also found in immune cells, influencing intracellular processes through protein modifications.
  • The article reviews the history and recent findings on serotonin's impact on depression, aging, and neurological diseases, focusing on its biological functions and potential therapeutic strategies.
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Background: Differences in DNA methylation can arise as epialleles, which are loci that differ in chromatin state and are inherited over generations. Epialleles offer an additional source of variation that can affect phenotypic diversity beyond changes to nucleotide sequence. Previous research has looked at the rate at which spontaneous epialleles arise but it is currently unknown how they are maintained across generations.

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Background: The evolution of gene body methylation (gbM), its origins, and its functional consequences are poorly understood. By pairing the largest collection of transcriptomes (>1000) and methylomes (77) across Viridiplantae, we provide novel insights into the evolution of gbM and its relationship to CHROMOMETHYLASE (CMT) proteins.

Results: CMTs are evolutionary conserved DNA methyltransferases in Viridiplantae.

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Background: DNA methylation is an important feature of plant epigenomes, involved in the formation of heterochromatin and affecting gene expression. Extensive variation of DNA methylation patterns within a species has been uncovered from studies of natural variation. However, the extent to which DNA methylation varies between flowering plant species is still unclear.

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In plants, CG DNA methylation is prevalent in the transcribed regions of many constitutively expressed genes (gene body methylation; gbM), but the origin and function of gbM remain unknown. Here we report the discovery that Eutrema salsugineum has lost gbM from its genome, to our knowledge the first instance for an angiosperm. Of all known DNA methyltransferases, only CHROMOMETHYLASE 3 (CMT3) is missing from E.

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Nucleotide-activated sugars are essential substrates for plant cell-wall carbohydrate-polymer biosynthesis. The most prevalent grass cell wall (CW) sugars are glucose (Glc), xylose (Xyl), and arabinose (Ara). These sugars are biosynthetically related via the UDP-sugar interconversion pathway.

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