Coding exons account for only 1.5 % of the genome,1 despite being the focus of most of the current biomedical research. A large proportion of the genome is made up of non-protein cod-ing regions that might have critical biological important, contain
Ever since the first genomes of model organisms were sequenced it became obvious that the number of ...
[Unearthing the buried treasures in the genome] The central dogma of molecular biology states that t...
It appears that the genetic programming of humans and other complex organisms has been misunderstood...
g4 The well-studied components in the human genome are those of protein-coding genes. However, the c...
turned the central dogma of molecular biology and helped to make sense of the “transcriptional noise...
Known protein coding gene exons compose less than 3% of the human genome. The remaining 97% is large...
Recent studies showing that most ‘‘messenger’ ’ RNAs do not encode proteins finally explain the long...
small RNAs in the pathoge gy no en the organism, whereas the number of protein-coding genes processi...
reported that there are far more transcripts than initially an-ticipated at the time of human genome...
This book assembles chapters from experts in the Biophysics of RNA to provide a broadly accessible s...
Estimates of the total number of bacterial species1-3 suggest that existing DNA sequence databases c...
One goal of genome projects is to systematically identify genes (1,2). The best current knowledge in...
Most genetic information is expressed as, and transacted by, proteins. Yet, less than 2 % of the hum...
In contrast to the fairly reliable and complete annotation of the protein coding genes in the human ...
By far not all genetic information is expressed by mRNA coding regions of the DNA. 98% of the human ...
Ever since the first genomes of model organisms were sequenced it became obvious that the number of ...
[Unearthing the buried treasures in the genome] The central dogma of molecular biology states that t...
It appears that the genetic programming of humans and other complex organisms has been misunderstood...
g4 The well-studied components in the human genome are those of protein-coding genes. However, the c...
turned the central dogma of molecular biology and helped to make sense of the “transcriptional noise...
Known protein coding gene exons compose less than 3% of the human genome. The remaining 97% is large...
Recent studies showing that most ‘‘messenger’ ’ RNAs do not encode proteins finally explain the long...
small RNAs in the pathoge gy no en the organism, whereas the number of protein-coding genes processi...
reported that there are far more transcripts than initially an-ticipated at the time of human genome...
This book assembles chapters from experts in the Biophysics of RNA to provide a broadly accessible s...
Estimates of the total number of bacterial species1-3 suggest that existing DNA sequence databases c...
One goal of genome projects is to systematically identify genes (1,2). The best current knowledge in...
Most genetic information is expressed as, and transacted by, proteins. Yet, less than 2 % of the hum...
In contrast to the fairly reliable and complete annotation of the protein coding genes in the human ...
By far not all genetic information is expressed by mRNA coding regions of the DNA. 98% of the human ...
Ever since the first genomes of model organisms were sequenced it became obvious that the number of ...
[Unearthing the buried treasures in the genome] The central dogma of molecular biology states that t...
It appears that the genetic programming of humans and other complex organisms has been misunderstood...