The currently-accepted dogma when analysing human Alu transposable elements is that ‘young’ Alu elements are found in low GC regions and ‘old’ Alus in high GC regions. The correlation between high GC regions and high gene frequency regions make this observation particularly difficult to explain. Although a number of studies have tackled the problem, no analysis has definitively explained the reason for this trend. These observations have been made by relying on the subfamily as a proxy for age of an element. In this study, we suggest that this is a misleading assumption and instead analyse the relationship between the taxonomic distribution of an individual element and its surrounding GC environment. An analysis of 103906 Alu elements acros...
In primate genomes more than 40% of CpG islands are found within repetitive elements. With more than...
Alu elements are transposable elements that have reached over one million copies in the human genome...
The Alu Ya-lineage is a group of related, short interspersed elements (SINEs) found in primates. Thi...
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...
Alu elements are not distributed homogeneously throughout the human genome: old elements are prefere...
Motivation: Transposon-derived Alu repeats are exclusively associated with primate genomes. They hav...
Background: Alu elements are short (∼300 bp) interspersed elements that amplify in primate genomes t...
The first draft of the human genome has revealed enormous variability in the global distribution of ...
Alu elements are a family of interspersed repeats that have mobilized throughout primate genomes by ...
Alu elements have inserted in the human genome throughout primate evolution. A small number of Alu i...
Alu elements are the most successful SINEs (Short INterspersed Elements) in primate genomes and have...
Background: Alu elements are Short INterspersed Elements (SINEs) in primate genomes that have proven...
Background: Research into great ape genomes has revealed widely divergent activity levels over time ...
4 p.-1 fig.-1 tab.The Alu repetitive sequence family originated from a common ancestor. Its members,...
In primate genomes more than 40% of CpG islands are found within repetitive elements. With more than...
Alu elements are transposable elements that have reached over one million copies in the human genome...
The Alu Ya-lineage is a group of related, short interspersed elements (SINEs) found in primates. Thi...
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...
Alu elements are not distributed homogeneously throughout the human genome: old elements are prefere...
Motivation: Transposon-derived Alu repeats are exclusively associated with primate genomes. They hav...
Background: Alu elements are short (∼300 bp) interspersed elements that amplify in primate genomes t...
The first draft of the human genome has revealed enormous variability in the global distribution of ...
Alu elements are a family of interspersed repeats that have mobilized throughout primate genomes by ...
Alu elements have inserted in the human genome throughout primate evolution. A small number of Alu i...
Alu elements are the most successful SINEs (Short INterspersed Elements) in primate genomes and have...
Background: Alu elements are Short INterspersed Elements (SINEs) in primate genomes that have proven...
Background: Research into great ape genomes has revealed widely divergent activity levels over time ...
4 p.-1 fig.-1 tab.The Alu repetitive sequence family originated from a common ancestor. Its members,...
In primate genomes more than 40% of CpG islands are found within repetitive elements. With more than...
Alu elements are transposable elements that have reached over one million copies in the human genome...
The Alu Ya-lineage is a group of related, short interspersed elements (SINEs) found in primates. Thi...