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  1. Corynebacterium ulcerans has been detected as a commensal in domestic and wild animals that may serve as reservoirs for zoonotic infections. During the last decade, the frequency and severity of human infections ...

    Authors: Eva Trost, Arwa Al-Dilaimi, Panagiotis Papavasiliou, Jessica Schneider, Prisca Viehoever, Andreas Burkovski, Siomar C Soares, Sintia S Almeida, Fernanda A Dorella, Anderson Miyoshi, Vasco Azevedo, Maria P Schneider, Artur Silva, Cíntia S Santos, Louisy S Santos, Priscila Sabbadini…
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:383
  2. The R locus controls the color of pigmented soybean (Glycine max) seeds. However information about its control over seed coat biochemistry and gene expressions remains limited. The seed coats of nearly-isogenic b...

    Authors: Nik Kovinich, Ammar Saleem, John T Arnason and Brian Miki
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:381
  3. Triticale is adapted to a wide range of abiotic stress conditions, is an important high-quality feed stock and produces similar grain yield but more biomass compared to other crops. Modern genomic approaches a...

    Authors: Katharina V Alheit, Jochen C Reif, Hans Peter Maurer, Volker Hahn, Elmar A Weissmann, Thomas Miedaner and Tobias Würschum
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:380
  4. BAC-based physical maps provide for sequencing across an entire genome or a selected sub-genomic region of biological interest. Such a region can be approached with next-generation whole-genome sequencing and ...

    Authors: Frank A Feltus, Christopher A Saski, Keithanne Mockaitis, Niina Haiminen, Laxmi Parida, Zachary Smith, James Ford, Margaret E Staton, Stephen P Ficklin, Barbara P Blackmon, Chun-Huai Cheng, Raymond J Schnell, David N Kuhn and Juan-Carlos Motamayor
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:379
  5. Newly microarray technologies yield large-scale datasets. The microarray datasets are usually presented in 2D matrices, where rows represent genes and columns represent experimental conditions. Systematic anal...

    Authors: Junwan Liu, Zhoujun Li, Xiaohua Hu, Yiming Chen and EK Park
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S11

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  6. CpG islands are important regions in DNA. They usually appear at the 5’ end of genes containing GC-rich dinucleotides. When DNA methylation occurs, gene regulation is affected and it sometimes leads to carcino...

    Authors: Leah Spontaneo and Nick Cercone
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S10

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  7. Detecting epistatic interactions plays a significant role in improving pathogenesis, prevention, diagnosis and treatment of complex human diseases. A recent study in automatic detection of epistatic interactio...

    Authors: Bing Han and Xue-wen Chen
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S9

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  8. Metagenomic assembly is a challenging problem due to the presence of genetic material from multiple organisms. The problem becomes even more difficult when short reads produced by next generation sequencing te...

    Authors: Anveshi Charuvaka and Huzefa Rangwala
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S8

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  9. Genomic read alignment involves mapping (exactly or approximately) short reads from a particular individual onto a pre-sequenced reference genome of the same species. Because all individuals of the same specie...

    Authors: M Oğuzhan Külekci, Wing-Kai Hon, Rahul Shah, Jeffrey Scott Vitter and Bojian Xu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S7

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  10. There is a large amount of inconsistency in gene structure annotations of bacterial strains. This inconsistency is a frustrating impedance to effective comparative genomic analysis of bacterial strains in prom...

    Authors: Michal Wozniak, Limsoon Wong and Jerzy Tiuryn
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S6

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  11. Analysing gene expression data from microarray technologies is a very important task in biology and medicine, and particularly in cancer diagnosis. Different from most other popular methods in high dimensional...

    Authors: Zhenyu Wang and Vasile Palade
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S5

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  12. A major goal of metagenomics is to characterize the microbial composition of an environment. The most popular approach relies on 16S rRNA sequencing, however this approach can generate biased estimates due to ...

    Authors: Bo Liu, Theodore Gibbons, Mohammad Ghodsi, Todd Treangen and Mihai Pop
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S4

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  13. Reassortments are events in the evolution of the genome of influenza (flu), whereby segments of the genome are exchanged between different strains. As reassortments have been implicated in major human pandemic...

    Authors: Alisa Yurovsky and Bernard M E Moret
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S3

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  14. Proximity-based methods and co-evolution-based phylogenetic profiles methods have been successfully used for the identification of functionally related genes. Proximity-based methods are effective for physical...

    Authors: Vikas Rao Pejaver and Sun Kim
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S2

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  15. Strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) can be classified into major lineages based on their genotype. Further subdivision of major lineages into sublineages requires multiple biomarkers along with m...

    Authors: Cagri Ozcaglar, Amina Shabbeer, Scott Vandenberg, Bülent Yener and Kristin P Bennett
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12(Suppl 2):S1

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 12 Supplement 2

  16. KRAB-ZFPs (Krüppel-associated box domain-zinc finger proteins) are vertebrate-restricted transcriptional repressors encoded in the hundreds by the mouse and human genomes. They act via an essential cofactor, K...

    Authors: Sylvain Meylan, Anna C Groner, Giovanna Ambrosini, Nirav Malani, Simon Quenneville, Nadine Zangger, Adamandia Kapopoulou, Annamaria Kauzlaric, Jacques Rougemont, Angela Ciuffi, Frederic D Bushman, Philipp Bucher and Didier Trono
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:378
  17. In standard BLAST searches, no information other than the sequences of the query and the database entries is considered. However, in situations where two genes from different species have only borderline simil...

    Authors: Seán S ÓhÉigeartaigh, David Armisén, Kevin P Byrne and Kenneth H Wolfe
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:377
  18. The genus Silene is widely used as a model system for addressing ecological and evolutionary questions in plants, but advances in using the genus as a model system are impeded by the lack of available resources f...

    Authors: Nicolas Blavet, Delphine Charif, Christine Oger-Desfeux, Gabriel AB Marais and Alex Widmer
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:376
  19. Recent studies have demonstrated the genetic significance of insertions, deletions, and other more complex structural variants (SVs) in the human population. With the development of the next-generation sequenc...

    Authors: Zhengdong D Zhang, Jiang Du, Hugo Lam, Alex Abyzov, Alexander E Urban, Michael Snyder and Mark Gerstein
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:375
  20. Burkholderia cenocepacia is a member of the Burkholderia cepacia complex group of bacteria that cause infections in individuals with cystic fibrosis. B. cenocepacia isolate J2315 has been genome sequenced and is ...

    Authors: Andrea Sass, Angela Marchbank, Elizabeth Tullis, John J LiPuma and Eshwar Mahenthiralingam
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:373
  21. Copy number variations (CNVs) can create new genes, change gene dosage, reshape gene structures, and modify elements regulating gene expression. As with all types of genetic variation, CNVs may influence pheno...

    Authors: Ping Yu, Caihong Wang, Qun Xu, Yue Feng, Xiaoping Yuan, Hanyong Yu, Yiping Wang, Shengxiang Tang and Xinghua Wei
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:372
  22. Big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) is one of the most widely distributed and ecologically important shrub species in western North America. This species serves as a critical habitat and food resource for many a...

    Authors: Prabin Bajgain, Bryce A Richardson, Jared C Price, Richard C Cronn and Joshua A Udall
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:370
  23. Switchgrass, a C4 species and a warm-season grass native to the prairies of North America, has been targeted for development into an herbaceous biomass fuel crop. Genetic improvement of switchgrass feedstock t...

    Authors: Christopher A Saski, Zhigang Li, Frank A Feltus and Hong Luo
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:369
  24. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are the most abundant source of genetic variation among individuals of a species. New genotyping technologies allow examining hundreds to thousands of SNPs in a single re...

    Authors: Emilie Chancerel, Camille Lepoittevin, Grégoire Le Provost, Yao-Cheng Lin, Juan Pablo Jaramillo-Correa, Andrew J Eckert, Jill L Wegrzyn, Diana Zelenika, Anne Boland, Jean-Marc Frigerio, Philippe Chaumeil, Pauline Garnier-Géré, Christophe Boury, Delphine Grivet, Santiago C González-Martínez, Pierre Rouzé…
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:368
  25. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, endogenous RNAs that play important regulatory roles in development and stress response in plants by negatively affecting gene expression post-transcriptionally. Identification of...

    Authors: Tianzuo Wang, Lei Chen, Mingui Zhao, Qiuying Tian and Wen-Hao Zhang
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:367
  26. Pinus pinaster is an economically and ecologically important species that is becoming a woody gymnosperm model. Its enormous genome size makes whole-genome sequencing approaches are hard to apply. Therefore, the ...

    Authors: Noé Fernández-Pozo, Javier Canales, Darío Guerrero-Fernández, David P Villalobos, Sara M Díaz-Moreno, Rocío Bautista, Arantxa Flores-Monterroso, M Ángeles Guevara, Pedro Perdiguero, Carmen Collada, M Teresa Cervera, Álvaro Soto, Ricardo Ordás, Francisco R Cantón, Concepción Avila, Francisco M Cánovas…
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:366
  27. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor (TF) that mediates responses to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD). Integration of TCDD-induced genome-wide AhR enrichment, d...

    Authors: Edward Dere, Raymond Lo, Trine Celius, Jason Matthews and Timothy R Zacharewski
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:365
  28. Understanding animal development and physiology at a molecular-biological level has been advanced by the ability to determine at high resolution the repertoire of mRNA molecules by whole transcriptome resequen...

    Authors: Peter L Chang, Joseph P Dunham, Sergey V Nuzhdin and Michelle N Arbeitman
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:364
  29. Amaranthus hypochondriacus, a grain amaranth, is a C4 plant noted by its ability to tolerate stressful conditions and produce highly nutritious seeds. These possess an optimal amino acid balance and constitute a ...

    Authors: John P Délano-Frier, Hamlet Avilés-Arnaut, Kena Casarrubias-Castillo, Gabriela Casique-Arroyo, Paula A Castrillón-Arbeláez, Luis Herrera-Estrella, Julio Massange-Sánchez, Norma A Martínez-Gallardo, Fannie I Parra-Cota, Erandi Vargas-Ortiz and María G Estrada-Hernández
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:363
  30. Boar taint is observed in a high proportion of uncastrated male pigs and is characterized by an unpleasant odor/flavor in cooked meat, primarily caused by elevated levels of androstenone and skatole. Androsten...

    Authors: Eli Grindflek, Sigbjørn Lien, Hanne Hamland, Marianne HS Hansen, Matthew Kent, Maren van Son and Theo HE Meuwissen
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:362
  31. Shine-Dalgarno (SD) signal has long been viewed as the dominant translation initiation signal in prokaryotes. Recently, leaderless genes, which lack 5'-untranslated regions (5'-UTR) on their mRNAs, have been s...

    Authors: Xiaobin Zheng, Gang-Qing Hu, Zhen-Su She and Huaiqiu Zhu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:361
  32. Orchids are one of the most diversified angiosperms, but few genomic resources are available for these non-model plants. In addition to the ecological significance, Phalaenopsis has been considered as an economic...

    Authors: Yu-Yun Hsiao, Yun-Wen Chen, Shi-Ching Huang, Zhao-Jun Pan, Chih-Hsiung Fu, Wen-Huei Chen, Wen-Chieh Tsai and Hong-Hwa Chen
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:360
  33. One of the major tasks of the post-genomic era is "reading" genomic sequences in order to extract all the biological information contained in them. Although a wide variety of techniques is used to solve the ge...

    Authors: Lian Zhou, Frank-Jörg Vorhölter, Yong-Qiang He, Bo-Le Jiang, Ji-Liang Tang, Yuquan Xu, Alfred Pühler and Ya-Wen He
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:359
  34. Database searching is the most frequently used approach for automated peptide assignment and protein inference of tandem mass spectra. The results, however, depend on the sequences in target databases and on s...

    Authors: Kung-Yen Chang and David C Muddiman
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:358
  35. The cell suicide pathway of apoptosis is a necessary event in the life of multicellular organisms. It is involved in many biological processes ranging from development to the immune response. Evolutionarily co...

    Authors: Juliette Courtiade, Yannick Pauchet, Heiko Vogel and David G Heckel
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:357
  36. Cellular senescence is an irreversible cell cycle arrest that normal cells undergo in response to progressive shortening of telomeres, changes in telomeric structure, oncogene activation or oxidative stress an...

    Authors: Emilie Rovillain, Louise Mansfield, Christopher J Lord, Alan Ashworth and Parmjit S Jat
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:355
  37. Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries continue to be invaluable tools for the genomic analysis of complex organisms. Complemented by the newly and fast growing deep sequencing technologies, they prov...

    Authors: Razvan Anistoroaei, Boudewijn ten Hallers, Michael Nefedov, Knud Christensen and Pieter de Jong
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:354
  38. Transcription factors in disease-relevant pathways represent potential drug targets, by impacting a distinct set of pathways that may be modulated through gene regulation. The influence of transcription factor...

    Authors: Geir K Sandve, Sveinung Gundersen, Halfdan Rydbeck, Ingrid K Glad, Lars Holden, Marit Holden, Knut Liestøl, Trevor Clancy, Finn Drabløs, Egil Ferkingstad, Morten Johansen, Vegard Nygaard, Eivind Tøstesen, Arnoldo Frigessi and Eivind Hovig
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:353
  39. Eight diverse sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) accessions were subjected to short-read genome sequencing to characterize the distribution of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Two strategies were used for...

    Authors: James C Nelson, Shichen Wang, Yuye Wu, Xianran Li, Ginny Antony, Frank F White and Jianming Yu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:352
  40. Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BACs) have been widely used as transgenes in vertebrate model systems such as mice and zebrafish, for a variety of studies. BAC transgenesis has been a powerful tool to study ...

    Authors: Leighcraft A Shakes, Gembu Abe, Mugtaba A Eltayeb, Hope M Wolf, Koichi Kawakami and Pradeep K Chatterjee
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:351
  41. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are the most common type of sequence variation among plants and are often functionally important. We describe the use of 454 technology and high resolution melting analys...

    Authors: Yuanhong Han, Yun Kang, Ivone Torres-Jerez, Foo Cheung, Christopher D Town, Patrick X Zhao, Michael K Udvardi and Maria J Monteros
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:350
  42. The gene content of a diverse group of 183 unique Escherichia coli and Shigella isolates was determined using the Affymetrix GeneChip®E. coli Genome 2.0 Array, originally designed for transcriptome analysis, as a...

    Authors: Scott A Jackson, Isha R Patel, Tammy Barnaba, Joseph E LeClerc and Thomas A Cebula
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:349
  43. High-pathogenic Y. enterocolitica ssp. enterocolitica caused several human outbreaks in Northern America. In contrast, low pathogenic Y. enterocolitica ssp. palearctica serobiotype O:3/4 is responsible for sporad...

    Authors: Julia Batzilla, Uladzimir Antonenka, Dirk Höper, Jürgen Heesemann and Alexander Rakin
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:348
  44. Oct4 is a key factor of an expanded transcriptional network (Oct4-TN) that governs pluripotency and self-renewal in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and in the inner cell mass from which ESCs are derived. A pending...

    Authors: Maurizio Zuccotti, Valeria Merico, Michele Bellone, Francesca Mulas, Lucia Sacchi, Paola Rebuzzini, Alessandro Prigione, Carlo A Redi, Riccardo Bellazzi, James Adjaye and Silvia Garagna
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:345
  45. Siraitia grosvenorii (Luohanguo) is an herbaceous perennial plant native to southern China and most prevalent in Guilin city. Its fruit contains a sweet, fleshy, edible pulp that is widely used in traditional Chi...

    Authors: Qi Tang, Xiaojun Ma, Changming Mo, Iain W Wilson, Cai Song, Huan Zhao, Yanfang Yang, Wei Fu and Deyou Qiu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:343
  46. The Ras superfamily plays an important role in the control of cell signalling and division. Mutations in the Ras genes convert them into active oncogenes. The Ras oncogenes form a major thrust of global cancer...

    Authors: Umay Kulsum, Vishwadeep Singh, Sujata Sharma, A Srinivasan, Tej P Singh and Punit Kaur
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2011 12:341

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