Publications by authors named "Y V Ilyin"

The emergence of new genes and functions is of paramount importance in the emergence of new animal species. For example, the insertion of the mobile element Tigger 2 into the sequence of the functional gene POU2F1 in primates led to the formation of a new chimeric primate-specific isoform POU2F1Z, the translation of which is activated under cellular stress. Its mRNA was found in all species of monkeys, starting with macaques.

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Overexpression of the transcription factor POU2F1 (Oct-1) increases the malignant potential of the tumor and determines the unfavorable prognosis for both solid and hematological cases of the disease in human carcinogenesis. The Oct-1 level determines the rate of development of the disease in acute myelodysplastic leukemia (AML), and a decrease in its expression significantly delays the development of leukemia in mice; however, a complete knockout of Oct-1 leads to the death of the animals. POU2F1 (Oct-1) is expressed as several isoforms transcribed from alternative promoters.

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Neuroblastoma is one of the most common cancers in infants and is often multidrug-resistant. One of the methods of treating neuroblastomas is to create conditions for their differentiation. In this work, we performed a full-transcriptome analysis of gene expression in an undifferentiated and differentiated in vitro human neuroblastoma cell line IMR-32 and identified the signaling pathways and biological processes that undergo the greatest changes during differentiation.

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POU2F1 (Oct-1) is a transcription factor, the overexpression of which is found in many human malignant tumors; a significant increase in its level in cells determines the malignant potential of the tumor. POU2F1 is represented in cells by several isoforms that are transcribed from alternative promoters. In Burkitt's B-cell lymphoma Namalwa, the concentration of tissue-specific isoform Oct-1L is several times higher than in normal B cells.

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Here we attempt to reconstruct the sequence of events that led to the formation of three regulatory piRNA clusters, namely, 20A, 38C and flamenco in the Drosophila melanogaster genome. Both the 38C and flamenco clusters include inverted sequences, which potentially form double-stranded RNA hairpins. We present evidence in favor of the well-known hypothesis of piRNA clusters as "transposon traps".

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