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The central dogma of molecular biology defines the major route for the transfer of genetic information from genomic DNA to messenger RNA to three-dimensional proteins that affect structure and function. Like alternative splicing, the... more
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      MicrobiologyImmunologyMedical MicrobiologyBiology
Archaea are abundant and drive critical microbial processes in the Earth's cold biosphere. Despite this, not enough is known about the molecular mechanisms of cold adaptation and no biochemical studies have been performed on... more
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      BacteriologyRNAMolecular MechanicsBiological Sciences
Human pre-mRNA splicing factor SF2/ASF has an activity required for general splicing in vitro and promotes utilization of proximal alternative 5' splice sites in a concentration-dependent manner by opposing hnRNP Al. We introduced... more
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      BiologyMedicineBiological SciencesDNA
Background: The pathological mechanism of the potent modifier of TDP-43 toxicity, ataxin-2, is unknown. Result: Ataxin-2 modified the subcellular distributions of truncated TDP-43 and mutant FUS. Conclusion: Increased ataxin-2 leads to a... more
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      RNABiological ChemistryNeurodegenerative DiseasesAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
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    •   61  
      PharmacologyBiochemistryBioinformaticsEvolutionary Biology
We present a systematic analysis of sequence motifs found in metazoan protein factors involved in constitutive pre-mRNA splicing and in alternative splicing regulation. Using profile analysis we constructed a database enriched in protein... more
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      Information SystemsBiological SciencesPhylogenyEnvironmental Sciences
LINGO-1 is a CNS-specific protein and a functional component of the NgR1/p75/LINGO-1 and NgR1/TAJ(TROY)/LINGO-1 signaling complexes that mediate inhibition of axonal outgrowth. These receptor complexes mediate the axonal growth inhibitory... more
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      Cognitive ScienceMembrane ProteinsImmunohistochemistrySpinal Cord Injury
PTB (polypyrimidine tract-binding protein) is an abundant and widely expressed RNA-binding protein with four RRM (RNA recognition motif) domains. PTB is involved in numerous post-transcriptional steps in gene expression in both the... more
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      RNAAlternative splicingRNA-binding proteinsAlternative Splicing
There have been contradictory ®ndings in the fragile X (fraX) literature about possible neurocognitive and psychological symptoms due to the fraX premutation (pM). The purpose of the present study was to investigate the relationship... more
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      GeneticsCognitionSpeechMemory
Primary transcripts of certain microRNA (miRNA) genes are subject to RNA editing that converts adenosine to inosine. However, the importance of miRNA editing remains largely undetermined.
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      Micro RnaMicroRNAScienceRNA silencing
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      RNARNA-binding proteins
Calcium/calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase II (CaMKII) is an important mediator of synaptic function that is regulated by multi-site phosphorylation and targeting through interactions with proteins. A new phosphorylation site at Thr253... more
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      Cellular SignallingCell lineCell morphologyPKC
Z-DNA is a high energy conformer of B-DNA that forms in vivo during transcription as a result of torsional strain generated by a moving polymerase. An understanding of the biological role of Z-DNA has advanced with the discovery that the... more
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      GeneticsBiologyMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyMedicine
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      Neurobiology Of DiseaseSkeletal muscle biologyBrainSpinal Muscular Atrophy
Interferon-α (IFNα) is a recombinant protein widely used in the therapy of several neoplasms such as myeloma, renal cell carcinoma, epidermoid cervical and head and neck tumours and melanoma. IFNα, the first cytokine to be produced by... more
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      Cell CycleApoptosisProtein synthesisSignal Transduction
Iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) 1 and 2 are RNA-binding proteins that control cellular iron metabolism by binding to conserved RNA motifs called iron-responsive elements (IREs). The currently known IRP-binding mRNAs encode proteins... more
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      MacrophagesTranscriptomeLiverMice
Although it is known that deletions or mutations of the SMN1 gene on chromosome 5 cause decreased levels of the SMN protein in subjects with proximal autosomal recessive spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), the exact sequence of pathological... more
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      ApoptosisProtein TranslocationSpinal Muscular AtrophyMutation
The Schizosaccharomyces pombe Mei2 gene encodes an RNA recognition motif (RRM) protein that stimulates meiosis upon binding a specific non-coding RNA and subsequent accumulation in a "mei2-dot" in the nucleus. We present here the first... more
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      GeneticsPattern FormationMolecular MechanicsNon Coding Rna
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    •   14  
      Kidney diseasesApoptosisSignal TransductionBiological Sciences
The following resources related to this article are available online at http://stke.sciencemag.org.
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      MitochondriaApoptosisSignal TransductionCaspases
Avian influenza virus (AIV) causes great economic losses for the poultry industry worldwide and threatens the human population with a pandemic. The conventional detection method for AIV involves sample preparation of viral RNA extraction... more
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      MicrobiologyMedical MicrobiologyLab On A ChipSample Preparation
is an unique genotype that infects neonates. The mechanism of such age-specific host restriction remains unknown. In this study, we explored host mucosal glycans as a potential age-specific factor for attachment of P RVs. Using in vitro... more
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      AgingMultidisciplinaryCell lineInfant
Although functional significance of large noncoding RNAs and their complexes with proteins is well recognized, structural information for this class of systems is very scarce. Their inherent flexibility causes problems in crystallographic... more
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      ThermodynamicsLong Noncoding RnaMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopySoftware
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      PregnancyFragile X SyndromeLancetRNA-binding proteins
Biofilms are characterized by a dense multicellular community of microorganisms that can be formed by the attachment of bacteria to an inert surface and to each other. The development of biofilm involves the initial attachment of... more
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      BiofilmsBiofilmBacteriaPost-Transcriptional Gene Regulation
The Bacillus cereus Group comprises organisms that are widely distributed in the environment and are of health and economic interest. We demonstrate an 'ecotypic' structure of populations in the B. cereus Group using (i) molecular data... more
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      MicrobiologyEnvironmental microbiologyFluorescenceBiodiversity
We have examined the effect of retinoic acid (RA) on differentiation of bone marrow-derived CD15 þ , Oct4 þ and CXCR4 þ cells into male germ cells. Bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs) were isolated from the femur of 3-4-week-old male C57BL/6... more
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      Cell BiologyTranscription FactorsCell DifferentiationMice
We report the expression patterns of three transcripts encoding RNA-binding proteins during early development of the Mediterranean sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. Two of these genes encode KH-domains RNA-binding proteins closely related... more
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      GeneticsAlternative splicingSea UrchinsClinical Sciences
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      GeneticsCentral Nervous SystemFragile X SyndromePhenotype
Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF5A) is a protein subject to hypusination, which is essential for its function. eIF5A is also acetylated, but the role of that modification is unknown. Here, we report that acetylation... more
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      LysineRNA-binding proteinsHeLa cellsAcetylation
Objective: This paper intends to evaluate inflammatory proteins and hematological factors concurrently blood obtained during the cupping and with the venous blood. Methods: About 30 samples of 10 men participated in this... more
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    •   78  
      Health PsychologyHealth SciencesHealth CommunicationHealth Promotion
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a common fatal autosomal recessive disorder characterized by degeneration of lower motor neurons, leading to progressive paralysis with muscular atrophy. The gene for SMA has been mapped to chromosome... more
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      Motor neuronBiological SciencesSpinal Muscular AtrophyMutation
The remarkable regenerative ability of planarians is made possible by a system of pluripotent stem cells. Recent molecular biological and ultrastructural studies have revealed that planarian stem cells consist of heterogeneous... more
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      Functional AnalysisRegenerationStem CellBiological Sciences
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      RNA-binding proteinsBiotransformationActive Transport
The past few years have seen an increased number of articles using Drosophila as a model system to study fragile X syndrome. Phenotypic analyses have demonstrated an array of neuronal and behavioral defects similar to the phenotypes... more
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      Drosophila melanogasterBiological SciencesFragile X SyndromeSynaptic Transmission
HeLa cells expressing the recombinant Marburg virus (MBGV) nucleoprotein (NP) have been studied by immunoelectron microscopy. It was found that MBGV NPs assembled into large aggregates which were in close association with membranes of the... more
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      VirologyBiological SciencesCercopithecus aethiopsRNA-binding proteins
Here we use high-throughput RT-PCR technology to take a snapshot of splicing changes in the full spectrum of high-and low-expressed genes during induction of fibroblasts, from several donors, into iPSCs and their subsequent... more
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      Cellular ReprogrammingMultidisciplinarySignal TransductionCell Differentiation
Rapid technological advances have evolved our understanding of human disorders with a complex genetic architecture. The identification of candidate genes from association studies allows researchers to investigate how allelic variation... more
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      Next generation sequencingSerotoninNeuronsSerotonin Receptors
Expression of the chloroplast psbD gene encoding the D2 protein of the photosystem II reaction center is regulated by light. In the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, D2 synthesis requires a high-molecularweight complex containing the... more
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      Plant BiologyDarknessPlantLight
ErbB2, a metastasis-promoting oncoprotein, is overexpressed in $25% of invasive/metastatic breast cancers, but in 50%-60% of noninvasive ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS). It has been puzzling how a subset of ErbB2-overexpressing DCIS... more
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      Breast CancerCell MigrationCell AdhesionTranscription Factors
... Russman 1979]. Most individuals die before age two years [Ignatius 1994, Thomas & Dubowitz 1994]. However ... al 2005]. • Valproic acid [Brichta et al 2003, Sumner et al 2003] increases SMN protein in skin fibroblasts. •... more
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      Cognitive ScienceMolecular BiologyRNAMedicine
The e-Xtra logo stands for "electronic extra" and indicates that the online version contains one supplemental figure.
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      MicrobiologyMedical MicrobiologySequence alignmentVirus
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      Computational BiologyImmunoprecipitationRNA-binding proteinsBase Sequence
Alternative splicing is generally controlled by proteins that bind directly to regulatory sequence elements and either activate or repress splicing of adjacent splice sites in a target pre-mRNA. Here, we have combined RNAi and mRNA-seq to... more
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      Computational BiologyMammalsBiological SciencesRNA interference
Alpha II-spectrin (alpha-fodrin) is a demonstrated endogenous substrate for caspase-3 in neurons undergoing unscheduled apoptotic death. We have previously identi®ed the caspase cleavage site that yields the distinctive 120 kDa spectrin... more
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      PsychologyCognitive ScienceNeurochemistryIntellectual Disability
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      Medical GeneticsBiological SciencesDevelopmental disabilitiesFragile X Syndrome
A rare γ-pyranopyrazole skeleton: design, one-pot synthesis and computational study † Drawing upon a consecutive amide coupling and intramolecular cyclisation pathway, a one-pot, straightforward synthetic route has been developed for a... more
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      BiochemistryGeneticsBiophysicsPeptide Chemistry
Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), which is activated by cytokines and growth factors, mediates biological actions in many physiological processes. In a previous study, we found that Y14, a core component of the... more
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      Gene expressionSignal TransductionRNA-binding proteinsProtein Binding
The herpes simplex virus Us11 gene product inhibits activation of the cellular PKR kinase and associates with a limited number of unrelated viral and cellular RNA molecules via a carboxyl-terminal 68-amino-acid segment rich in arginine... more
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    •   18  
      RNAVirologyBiological SciencesHigher Order Thinking
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      CalciumCell DivisionBiological SciencesAntibodies