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  1. Understanding sequence conservation is important for the study of sequence evolution and for the identification of functional regions of the genome. Current studies often measure sequence conservation based on...

    Authors: Xiaohui Cai, Haiyan Hu and Xiaoman Li
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:623
  2. The maintenance of internal pH in bacterial cells is challenged by natural stress conditions, during host infection or in biotechnological production processes. Comprehensive transcriptomic and proteomic analy...

    Authors: Martin Follmann, Ines Ochrombel, Reinhard Krämer, Christian Trötschel, Ansgar Poetsch, Christian Rückert, Andrea Hüser, Marcus Persicke, Dominic Seiferling, Jörn Kalinowski and Kay Marin
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:621
  3. Short RNAs, and in particular microRNAs, are important regulators of gene expression both within defined regulatory pathways and at the epigenetic scale. We investigated the short RNA (sRNA) population (18-24 ...

    Authors: Daniel Klevebring, Nathaniel R Street, Noah Fahlgren, Kristin D Kasschau, James C Carrington, Joakim Lundeberg and Stefan Jansson
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:620
  4. Chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with massively parallel sequencing (ChIP-seq) is increasingly being applied to study transcriptional regulation on a genome-wide scale. While numerous algorithms have rece...

    Authors: Teemu D Laajala, Sunil Raghav, Soile Tuomela, Riitta Lahesmaa, Tero Aittokallio and Laura L Elo
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:618
  5. Whole genome gene expression profiling has revolutionized research in the past decade especially with the advent of microarrays. Recently, there have been significant improvements in whole blood RNA isolation ...

    Authors: Elizabeth H Robison, Tony S Mondala, Adam R Williams, Steven R Head, Daniel R Salomon and Sunil M Kurian
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:617
  6. The Xanthomonadaceae family contains two xylem-limited plant pathogenic bacterial species, Xanthomonas albilineans and Xylella fastidiosa. X. fastidiosa was the first completely sequenced plant pathogen. It is in...

    Authors: Isabelle Pieretti, Monique Royer, Valérie Barbe, Sébastien Carrere, Ralf Koebnik, Stéphane Cociancich, Arnaud Couloux, Armelle Darrasse, Jérôme Gouzy, Marie-Agnès Jacques, Emmanuelle Lauber, Charles Manceau, Sophie Mangenot, Stéphane Poussier, Béatrice Segurens, Boris Szurek…
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:616
  7. Gastric cancers are generally classified into better differentiated intestinal-type tumor and poorly differentiated diffuse-type one according to Lauren's histological categorization. Although induction of pro...

    Authors: Hiraku Itadani, Hiroko Oshima, Masanobu Oshima and Hidehito Kotani
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:615
  8. Human genetic variation produces the wide range of phenotypic differences that make us individual. However, little is known about the distribution of variation in the most conserved functional regions of the h...

    Authors: Scott Davidson, Andrew Starkey and Alasdair MacKenzie
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:614
  9. It has been recognized cancer cells acquire characters reminiscent of those of normal stem cells, and the degree of stem cell gene expression correlates with patient prognosis. Lgr5(+) or CD133(+) epithelial s...

    Authors: Shing-Jyh Chang, Tao-Yeuan Wang, Chan-Yen Tsai, Tzu-Fang Hu, Margaret Dah-Tsyr Chang and Hsei-Wei Wang
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:613
  10. Microsatellite loci are frequently used in genomic studies of DNA sequence repeats and in population studies of genetic variability. To investigate the effect of sequence properties of microsatellites on their...

    Authors: Trevor J Pemberton, Conner I Sandefur, Mattias Jakobsson and Noah A Rosenberg
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:612
  11. Aspartic proteases are known to play an important role in the biology of nematode parasitism. This role is best characterised in blood-feeding nematodes, where they digest haemoglobin, but they are also likely...

    Authors: Luciane V Mello, Helen O'Meara, Daniel J Rigden and Steve Paterson
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:611
  12. Epigenetic modifications of histones and regulation of chromatin structure have been implicated in regulation of virulence gene families in P. falciparum. To better understand chromatin-mediated gene regulation, ...

    Authors: Scott J Westenberger, Long Cui, Neekesh Dharia, Elizabeth Winzeler and Liwang Cui
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:610
  13. The success of a biological control agent depends on key traits, particularly reproductive potential, environmental tolerance, and ability to be cultured. These traits can deteriorate rapidly when the biologic...

    Authors: Bishwo N Adhikari, Chin-Yo Lin, Xiaodong Bai, Todd A Ciche, Parwinder S Grewal, Adler R Dillman, John M Chaston, David I Shapiro-Ilan, Anwar L Bilgrami, Randy Gaugler, Paul W Sternberg and Byron J Adams
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:609
  14. The delta smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus) is a pelagic fish species listed as endangered under both the USA Federal and Californian State Endangered Species Acts and considered an indicator of ecosystem health i...

    Authors: Richard E Connon, Juergen Geist, Janice Pfeiff, Alexander V Loguinov, Leandro S D'Abronzo, Henri Wintz, Christopher D Vulpe and Inge Werner
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:608
  15. Microsporidia are obligate intracellular eukaryotic parasites with genomes ranging in size from 2.3 Mbp to more than 20 Mbp. The extremely small (2.9 Mbp) and highly compact (~1 gene/kb) genome of the human pa...

    Authors: Eric Peyretaillade, Olivier Gonçalves, Sébastien Terrat, Eric Dugat-Bony, Patrick Wincker, Robert S Cornman, Jay D Evans, Frédéric Delbac and Pierre Peyret
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:607
  16. Host defense peptides are a critical component of the innate immune system. Human alpha- and beta-defensin genes are subject to copy number variation (CNV) and historically the organization of mouse alpha-defe...

    Authors: Clara Amid, Linda M Rehaume, Kelly L Brown, James GR Gilbert, Gordon Dougan, Robert EW Hancock and Jennifer L Harrow
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:606
  17. Current models propose that mitochondrial DNA macrohaplogroups M and N evolved from haplogroup L3 soon after modern humans left Africa. Increasingly, however, analysis of isolated populations is filling in the...

    Authors: François-X Ricaut, Harilanto Razafindrazaka, Murray P Cox, Jean-M Dugoujon, Evelyne Guitard, Clement Sambo, Maru Mormina, Marta Mirazon-Lahr, Bertrand Ludes and Eric Crubézy
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:605
  18. With the rapid growth in the availability of genome sequence data, the automated identification of orthologous genes between species (orthologs) is of fundamental importance to facilitate functional annotation...

    Authors: Raffaele Mazza, Francesco Strozzi, Andrea Caprera, Paolo Ajmone-Marsan and John L Williams
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:604
  19. Strepsiptera are an unusual group of sexually dimorphic, entomophagous parasitoids whose evolutionary origins remain elusive. The lineage leading to Mengenilla australiensis (Family Mengenillidae) is the sister g...

    Authors: Dino P McMahon, Alexander Hayward and Jeyaraney Kathirithamby
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:603
  20. The nucleosome is the fundamental unit of eukaryotic genomes. Experimental evidence suggests that the genomic DNA sequence and a variety of protein factors contribute to nucleosome positioning in vivo. However, h...

    Authors: Zhiming Dai, Xianhua Dai, Qian Xiang, Jihua Feng, Yangyang Deng and Jiang Wang
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:602
  21. Metamorphosis is an important process in the life cycle of holometabolous insects and is regulated by insect hormones. During metamorphosis, the epidermis goes through a significant transformation at the bioch...

    Authors: Qiang Fu, Peng-Cheng Liu, Jin-Xing Wang, Qi-Sheng Song and Xiao-Fan Zhao
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:600
  22. Biofilm formation enhances the capacity of pathogenic Salmonella bacteria to survive stresses that are commonly encountered within food processing and during host infection. The persistence of Salmonella within t...

    Authors: Shea Hamilton, Roy JM Bongaerts, Francis Mulholland, Brett Cochrane, Jonathan Porter, Sacha Lucchini, Hilary M Lappin-Scott and Jay CD Hinton
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:599
  23. Atypical tRNAs are functional minimal tRNAs, lacking either the D- or T-arm. They are significantly shorter than typical cloverleaf tRNAs. Widespread occurrence of atypical tRNAs was first demonstrated for sec...

    Authors: Pavel B Klimov and Barry M OConnor
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:598
  24. Genes of conserved order in bacterial genomes tend to evolve slower than genes whose order is not conserved. In addition, genes with a GC content lower than the GC content of the resident genome are known to b...

    Authors: Nikolas Papanikolaou, Kalliopi Trachana, Theodosios Theodosiou, Vasilis J Promponas and Ioannis Iliopoulos
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:597
  25. The application of high-throughput genomic tools in nutrition research is a widespread practice. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that the outcome of individual expression studies is insufficient for...

    Authors: Duccio Cavalieri, Enrica Calura, Chiara Romualdi, Emmanuela Marchi, Marijana Radonjic, Ben Van Ommen and Michael Müller
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:596
  26. Macrophages are immune cells involved in various biological processes including host defence, homeostasis, differentiation, and organogenesis. Disruption of macrophage biology has been linked to increased path...

    Authors: Sebastian Schmeier, Cameron R MacPherson, Magbubah Essack, Mandeep Kaur, Ulf Schaefer, Harukazu Suzuki, Yoshihide Hayashizaki and Vladimir B Bajic
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:595
  27. Comparative mapping is a powerful tool to transfer genomic information from sequenced genomes to closely related species for which whole genome sequence data are not yet available. However, such an approach is...

    Authors: Hong Liu, Yanliang Jiang, Shaolin Wang, Parichart Ninwichian, Benjaporn Somridhivej, Peng Xu, Jason Abernathy, Huseyin Kucuktas and Zhanjiang Liu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:592
  28. The mitochondrial (mt) genomes of sponges possess a variety of features, which appear to be intermediate between those of Eumetazoa and non-metazoan opisthokonts. Among these features is the presence of long i...

    Authors: Dirk Erpenbeck, Oliver Voigt, Gert Wörheide and Dennis V Lavrov
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:591
  29. Microsatellite markers have proven useful in genetic studies in many organisms, yet microsatellite-based studies of the dengue and yellow fever vector mosquito Aedes aegypti have been limited by the number of ass...

    Authors: Diane D Lovin, Katie O Washington, Becky deBruyn, Ryan R Hemme, Akio Mori, Sarah R Epstein, Brent W Harker, Thomas G Streit and David W Severson
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:590
  30. Ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) catalyse the only known de novo pathway for deoxyribonucleotide synthesis, and are therefore essential to DNA-based life. While ribonucleotide reduction has a single evolutiona...

    Authors: Daniel Lundin, Eduard Torrents, Anthony M Poole and Britt-Marie Sjöberg
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:589
  31. The accurate and high resolution mapping of DNA copy number aberrations has become an important tool by which to gain insight into the mechanisms of tumourigenesis. There are various commercially available pla...

    Authors: Christina Curtis, Andy G Lynch, Mark J Dunning, Inmaculada Spiteri, John C Marioni, James Hadfield, Suet-Feung Chin, James D Brenton, Simon Tavaré and Carlos Caldas
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:588
  32. Prunus fruit development, growth, ripening, and senescence includes major biochemical and sensory changes in texture, color, and flavor. The genetic dissection of these complex processes has important application...

    Authors: Ebenezer A Ogundiwin, Cameron P Peace, Thomas M Gradziel, Dan E Parfitt, Fredrick A Bliss and Carlos H Crisosto
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:587
  33. Wheat stripe rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Pst), is one of the most destructive diseases of wheat worldwide. To establish compatibility with the host, Pst forms special infection structures...

    Authors: Jinbiao Ma, Xueling Huang, Xiaojie Wang, Xianming Chen, Zhipeng Qu, Lili Huang and Zhensheng Kang
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:586
  34. Rhs genes are prominent features of bacterial genomes that have previously been implicated in genomic rearrangements in E. coli. By comparing rhs repertoires across the Enterobacteriaceae, this study provides a r...

    Authors: Andrew P Jackson, Gavin H Thomas, Julian Parkhill and Nicholas R Thomson
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:584
  35. Identification of molecular classifiers from genome-wide gene expression analysis is an important practice for the investigation of biological systems in the post-genomic era - and one with great potential for...

    Authors: Lucas B Edelman, Giuseppe Toia, Donald Geman, Wei Zhang and Nathan D Price
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:583
  36. High density genetic maps of plants have, nearly without exception, made use of marker datasets containing missing or questionable genotype calls derived from a variety of genic and non-genic or anonymous mark...

    Authors: Timothy J Close, Prasanna R Bhat, Stefano Lonardi, Yonghui Wu, Nils Rostoks, Luke Ramsay, Arnis Druka, Nils Stein, Jan T Svensson, Steve Wanamaker, Serdar Bozdag, Mikeal L Roose, Matthew J Moscou, Shiaoman Chao, Rajeev K Varshney, Péter Szűcs…
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:582
  37. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a novel class of gene regulators whose biogenesis involves hairpin structures called precursor miRNAs, or pre-miRNAs. A pre-miRNA is processed to make a miRNA:miRNA* duplex, which is the...

    Authors: Song Li, Edward A Mead, Shaohui Liang and Zhijian Tu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10:581
  38. Rate-limiting enzymes, because of their relatively low velocity, are believed to influence metabolic flux in pathways. To investigate their regulatory role in metabolic networks, we look at the global organiza...

    Authors: Min Zhao and Hong Qu
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S31

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  39. Gene regulation is a key mechanism in higher eukaryotic cellular processes. One of the major challenges in gene regulation studies is to identify regulators affecting the expression of their target genes in sp...

    Authors: Je-Keun Rhee, Je-Gun Joung, Jeong-Ho Chang, Zhangjun Fei and Byoung-Tak Zhang
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S29

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  40. Most phylogenetic studies using current methods have focused on primary DNA sequence information. However, RNA secondary structures are particularly useful in systematics because they include characteristics t...

    Authors: Pramod Kumar Prasad, Veena Tandon, Devendra Kumar Biswal, Lalit Mohan Goswami and Anupam Chatterjee
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S25

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  41. The reconstruction of gene regulatory networks from high-throughput "omics" data has become a major goal in the modelling of living systems. Numerous approaches have been proposed, most of which attempt only "...

    Authors: Sidath Randeni Kadupitige, Kin Chun Leung, Julia Sellmeier, Jane Sivieng, Daniel R Catchpoole, Michael E Bain and Bruno A Gaëta
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S17

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  42. Gene expression similarity measuring methods were developed and applied to search rapidly growing public microarray databases. However, current expression similarity measuring methods need to be improved to ac...

    Authors: Changwon Keum, Jung Hoon Woo, Won Seok Oh, Sue-Nie Park and Kyoung Tai No
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S15

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  43. Next-generation sequencing technologies provide exciting avenues for studies of transcriptomics and population genomics. There is an increasing need to conduct spliced and unspliced alignments of short transcr...

    Authors: Hua Bao, Yuanyan Xiong, Hui Guo, Renchao Zhou, Xuemei Lu, Zhen Yang, Yang Zhong and Suhua Shi
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S13

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  44. Mitochondrial sequence variation provides critical information for studying human evolution and variation. Mitochondrial DNA provides information on the origin of humans, and plays a substantial role in forens...

    Authors: Yong Seok Lee, Woo-Yeon Kim, Mihyun Ji, Ji Han Kim and Jong Bhak
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S12

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

  45. Next-generation DNA sequencing technologies generate tens of millions of sequencing reads in one run. These technologies are now widely used in biology research such as in genome-wide identification of polymor...

    Authors: Shu-Qi Zhao, Jun Wang, Li Zhang, Jiong-Tang Li, Xiaocheng Gu, Ge Gao and Liping Wei
    Citation: BMC Genomics 2009 10(Suppl 3):S2

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 3

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