Results 161 to 170 of about 209,431 (210)

Noncoding RNA Databases

Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, 2023
Abstract: Diseases such as cancer are often defined by dysregulation of gene expression. Noncoding RNAs (ncRNA) such as microRNAs are involved in gene expression and cell-cell communication. Many other ncRNAs exist, such as circular RNAs and small nucleolar RNAs.
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Noncoding RNAs

Biochemistry (Moscow), 2007
There has been substantial progress in studies on non-protein-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) during the last decade. Due to the development of new experimental approaches, a wide variety of such molecules have been found. This review considers the major groups of eukaryotic ncRNAs successfully studied in recent years.
J A, Makarova, D A, Kramerov
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HSP90 and Noncoding RNAs

DNA and Cell Biology, 2023
Heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) family is a class of proteins known as molecular chaperones that promote client protein folding and translocation in unstressed cells and regulate cellular homeostasis in the stress response. Noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) are defined as RNAs that do not encode proteins.
Qing Xu   +6 more
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Imprinted noncoding RNAs

Mammalian Genome, 2008
Imprinted genes are silenced in a parental-specific manner and tend to occur in clusters. All well-characterised imprinted clusters contain noncoding RNAs that are silenced according to parental origin. These can be broadly classified into long noncoding RNAs and short regulatory RNAs.
Jo, Peters, Joan E, Robson
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Noncoding RNA

2022
The human genome is composed of roughly 20 000 genes that are transcribed into messenger RNAs and subsequently translated into protein products. These protein-coding genes comprise 1–2% of the sequence space in the human genome. The remaining 98% of the genome was long believed to be devoid of meaningful information and often referred to as ‘junk DNA’.
null Neelabh, Akash Gautam
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