Results 331 to 340 of about 9,738,594 (396)

Tests for Gene Clustering

Journal of Computational Biology, 2002
Comparing chromosomal gene order in two or more related species is an important approach to studying the forces that guide genome organization and evolution. Linked clusters of similar genes found in related genomes are often used to support arguments of evolutionary relatedness or functional selection.
Dannie, Durand, David, Sankoff
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Clustering Gene Expression Patterns

Journal of Computational Biology, 1999
Recent advances in biotechnology allow researchers to measure expression levels for thousands of genes simultaneously, across different conditions and over time. Analysis of data produced by such experiments offers potential insight into gene function and regulatory mechanisms.
A, Ben-Dor, R, Shamir, Z, Yakhini
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MetaHoxgene clusters

Journal of Experimental Zoology, 2000
Homeobox genes encode important developmental control proteins. The Drosophila fruit fly HOM complex genes are clustered in region 84-89 of chromosome 3. Probably due to large-scale genome duplication events, their human HOX orthologs belong to four paralogous regions.
F, Coulier   +3 more
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MIBiG 4.0: advancing biosynthetic gene cluster curation through global collaboration

Nucleic Acids Research
Specialized or secondary metabolites are small molecules of biological origin, often showing potent biological activities with applications in agriculture, engineering and medicine.
Mitja M. Zdouc   +287 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Tandem genes and clustered genes

Journal of Theoretical Biology, 1995
Two patterns of gene repetition are described: tandem arraying and clustering. Tandemly arrayed genes reside within segments of DNA that are repeated head-to-tail a number of times. Clustered genes are linked but irregularly spaced, are often mutually inverted in an unpredictable pattern and are connected by non-conserved DNA.
openaire   +2 more sources

Metabolic Gene Clusters in Eukaryotes

Annual Review of Genetics, 2018
In bacteria, more than half of the genes in the genome are organized in operons. In contrast, in eukaryotes, functionally related genes are usually dispersed across the genome. There are, however, numerous examples of functional clusters of nonhomologous genes for metabolic pathways in fungi and plants.
Nutzmann, Hans-Wilhelm   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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