Alu elements are not distributed homogeneously throughout the human genome: old elements are preferentially found in the GC-rich parts of the genome, while young Alus are more often found in the GC-poor parts of the genome. The process giving rise to this differential distribution remains poorly understood. Here we investigate whether this pattern could be due to a preferential degradation of Alu elements integrated in GC-poor regions by small indel mutations. We aligned 5.1 Mb of human and chimpanzee sequences and examined whether the rate of insertion and deletion inside Alu elements differed according to the base composition surrounding them. We found that Alu elements are not preferentially degraded in GC-poor regions by indel events. W...
Regional biases in substitution pattern are likely to be responsible for the large-scale variation i...
A statistical analysis of a set of genomic human Alu elements is based on a published alignment and ...
SummaryThe human genome contains approximately one million Alu repetitive elements comprising 10% of...
The currently-accepted dogma when analysing human Alu transposable elements is that 'young' Alu elem...
Alu elements represent the largest family of human mobile elements in copy number. A controversial i...
Elucidation of complete nucleotide sequence of the human has revealed that coding sequences that sto...
The distribution of Alu and L1 retroelements in the human genome changes with their age. Active retr...
The first draft of the human genome has revealed enormous variability in the global distribution of ...
Motivation: Transposon-derived Alu repeats are exclusively associated with primate genomes. They hav...
The distribution in the human genome of the largest family of mobile elements, the Alu sequences, ha...
Remnants of more than 3 million transposable elements, primarily retroelements, comprise nearly half...
Relative to genomes of other sequenced organisms, the human genome appears particularly enriched for...
Mutations have been examined in the 1500 interspersed Alu repeats of human DNA that have been sequen...
Identifying features shaping the architecture of sequence variations is important for understanding ...
4 p.-1 fig.-1 tab.The Alu repetitive sequence family originated from a common ancestor. Its members,...
Regional biases in substitution pattern are likely to be responsible for the large-scale variation i...
A statistical analysis of a set of genomic human Alu elements is based on a published alignment and ...
SummaryThe human genome contains approximately one million Alu repetitive elements comprising 10% of...
The currently-accepted dogma when analysing human Alu transposable elements is that 'young' Alu elem...
Alu elements represent the largest family of human mobile elements in copy number. A controversial i...
Elucidation of complete nucleotide sequence of the human has revealed that coding sequences that sto...
The distribution of Alu and L1 retroelements in the human genome changes with their age. Active retr...
The first draft of the human genome has revealed enormous variability in the global distribution of ...
Motivation: Transposon-derived Alu repeats are exclusively associated with primate genomes. They hav...
The distribution in the human genome of the largest family of mobile elements, the Alu sequences, ha...
Remnants of more than 3 million transposable elements, primarily retroelements, comprise nearly half...
Relative to genomes of other sequenced organisms, the human genome appears particularly enriched for...
Mutations have been examined in the 1500 interspersed Alu repeats of human DNA that have been sequen...
Identifying features shaping the architecture of sequence variations is important for understanding ...
4 p.-1 fig.-1 tab.The Alu repetitive sequence family originated from a common ancestor. Its members,...
Regional biases in substitution pattern are likely to be responsible for the large-scale variation i...
A statistical analysis of a set of genomic human Alu elements is based on a published alignment and ...
SummaryThe human genome contains approximately one million Alu repetitive elements comprising 10% of...