4 results match your criteria: "Institute for Information Transmission Problems (the Kharkevich Institute) RAS[Affiliation]"
Mol Neurobiol
March 2018
Center of Brain Neurobiology and Neurogenetics, Institute of Cytology and Genetics SB RAS, Lavrentyeva Ave. 10, 630090, Novosibirsk, Russia.
Adaptability to a variety of environmental conditions is a prominent feature of Homo sapiens. We hypothesize that this feature can be explained by evolutionary changes in gene promoters active in the brain prefrontal cortex leading to a more flexible gene regulation network. The genotype-dependent range of gene expression can be broader in humans than in other higher primates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent data indicate that eukaryotic chromosomes are organized into Topologically Associating Domains (TADs); however, the mechanisms underlying TAD formation remain obscure. Based on the results of Hi-C analysis performed on 4 Drosophila melanogaster cell lines, we have proposed that specific properties of nucleosomes in active and repressed chromatin play a key role in the formation of TADs. Our computer simulations showed that the ability of "inactive" nucleosomes to stick to each other and the lack of such ability in "active" nucleosomes is sufficient for spatial segregation of these types of chromatin, which is revealed in the Hi-C analysis as TAD/inter-TAD partitioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
January 2008
Institute for Information Transmission Problems (the Kharkevich Institute) RAS, Bolshoi Karetny pereulok 19, Moscow, 127994, Russia.
Background: Most retained introns found in human cDNAs generated by high-throughput sequencing projects seem to result from underspliced transcripts, and thus they capture intermediate steps of pre-mRNA splicing. On the other hand, mutations in splice sites cause exon skipping of the respective exon or activation of pre-existing cryptic sites. Both types of events reflect properties of the splicing mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
October 2007
Institute for Information Transmission Problems (the Kharkevich Institute) RAS, Bolshoi Karetnyi per, 19, Moscow, 127994, Russia.
Background: Several recently completed large-scale enviromental sequencing projects produced a large amount of genetic information about microbial communities ('metagenomes') which is not biased towards cultured organisms. It is a good source for estimation of the abundance of genes and regulatory structures in both known and unknown members of microbial communities. In this study we consider the distribution of RNA regulatory structures, riboswitches, in the Sargasso Sea, Minnesota Soil and Whale Falls metagenomes.
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