[[abstract]]Alternative splicing is known to significantly affect exon-level protein evolutionary rates in mammals. Particularly, alternatively spliced exons (ASEs) have a higher nonsynonymous-to-synonymous substitution rate (dN/dS) ratio than constitutively spliced exons (CSEs), possibly because the former are required only occasionally for normal biological functions. Meanwhile, intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs), the protein regions lacking fixed three-dimensional structures, are also reported to have an increased evolutionary rate due to lack of structural constraint. Interestingly, IDRs tend to be located in alternative protein regions. Yet which of these two factors is the major determinant of the increased dN/dS in mammalian ASE...
The functional significance of most alternative splicing (AS) events, especially frame-shifting ones...
Abstract Background Alternative splicing has been shown to be one of the major evolutionary mechanis...
events frequently arise from the evolutionarily rapid loss or gain of exons from genomes (referred t...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing is known to significantly affect exon-level protein evolutionary ra...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing is known to significantly affect exon-level protein evolutionary ra...
From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene compactness and...
From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene compactness and...
[[abstract]]From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene com...
[[abstract]]From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene com...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing (AS) has been recognized as a mechanism of relaxing selection press...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing (AS) has been recognized as a mechanism of relaxing selection press...
Abstract Background At least half of mammalian genes are alternatively spliced. Alternative isoforms...
Background: Alternatively spliced exons play an important role in the diversification of gene functi...
Background: Alternatively spliced exons play an important role in the diversification of gene functi...
Abstract Background Alternatively spliced exons play an important role in the diversification of gen...
The functional significance of most alternative splicing (AS) events, especially frame-shifting ones...
Abstract Background Alternative splicing has been shown to be one of the major evolutionary mechanis...
events frequently arise from the evolutionarily rapid loss or gain of exons from genomes (referred t...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing is known to significantly affect exon-level protein evolutionary ra...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing is known to significantly affect exon-level protein evolutionary ra...
From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene compactness and...
From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene compactness and...
[[abstract]]From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene com...
[[abstract]]From studies investigating the differences in evolutionary rates between genes, gene com...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing (AS) has been recognized as a mechanism of relaxing selection press...
[[abstract]]Alternative splicing (AS) has been recognized as a mechanism of relaxing selection press...
Abstract Background At least half of mammalian genes are alternatively spliced. Alternative isoforms...
Background: Alternatively spliced exons play an important role in the diversification of gene functi...
Background: Alternatively spliced exons play an important role in the diversification of gene functi...
Abstract Background Alternatively spliced exons play an important role in the diversification of gen...
The functional significance of most alternative splicing (AS) events, especially frame-shifting ones...
Abstract Background Alternative splicing has been shown to be one of the major evolutionary mechanis...
events frequently arise from the evolutionarily rapid loss or gain of exons from genomes (referred t...