L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the generation of genomic variation and diversification of mammalian genomes, but reliable estimates of the numbers of actively transposing L1 elements are mostly nonexistent. While the human and mouse genomes contain comparable numbers of L1 elements, several phylogenetic and L1Xplore analyses in the mouse genome suggest that 1,500–3,000 active L1 elements currently exist and that they are still expanding in the genome. Conversely, the human genome contains only 150 active L1 elements. In addition, there is a discrepancy among the nature and number of mouse L1 elements in L1Xplore and the mouse genome browser at the UCSC and in the literature. To date, the reason...
L1 retrotransposons have had a tremendous impact on mammalian genomes through a variety of mechanism...
LINE-1 (L1) insertions comprise as much as 17% of the human genome sequence, and similar proportions...
LINE-1 (L1) insertions comprise as much as 17% of the human genome sequence, and similar proportions...
BACKGROUND: L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the genera...
Background: L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the genera...
BACKGROUND L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the generat...
Approximately half of the mammalian genome is composed of various types of transposable elements. On...
Transposable elements, also called jumping genes, comprise almost 45% of the human genome. In contra...
L1 s a dynamic repetitive sequence family that participates in mammalian genome evolution. A small s...
Thesis (Ph.D.), School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State UniversityThe mouse and human geno...
<div><p>Long INterspersed Element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) is a retrotransposable element that has shaped th...
AbstractA genome-wide view of sequence mutability in mice is still limited, although biologists usua...
<p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Exonization of active mouse L1s: a driver of tran...
International audienceBackgroundTransgenes are often engineered using regulatory elements from dista...
International audienceBackground: Transposable element (TE)-derived sequence dominates the landscape...
L1 retrotransposons have had a tremendous impact on mammalian genomes through a variety of mechanism...
LINE-1 (L1) insertions comprise as much as 17% of the human genome sequence, and similar proportions...
LINE-1 (L1) insertions comprise as much as 17% of the human genome sequence, and similar proportions...
BACKGROUND: L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the genera...
Background: L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the genera...
BACKGROUND L1 retrotransposable elements are potent insertional mutagens responsible for the generat...
Approximately half of the mammalian genome is composed of various types of transposable elements. On...
Transposable elements, also called jumping genes, comprise almost 45% of the human genome. In contra...
L1 s a dynamic repetitive sequence family that participates in mammalian genome evolution. A small s...
Thesis (Ph.D.), School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State UniversityThe mouse and human geno...
<div><p>Long INterspersed Element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) is a retrotransposable element that has shaped th...
AbstractA genome-wide view of sequence mutability in mice is still limited, although biologists usua...
<p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Exonization of active mouse L1s: a driver of tran...
International audienceBackgroundTransgenes are often engineered using regulatory elements from dista...
International audienceBackground: Transposable element (TE)-derived sequence dominates the landscape...
L1 retrotransposons have had a tremendous impact on mammalian genomes through a variety of mechanism...
LINE-1 (L1) insertions comprise as much as 17% of the human genome sequence, and similar proportions...
LINE-1 (L1) insertions comprise as much as 17% of the human genome sequence, and similar proportions...