International audienceThe discovery that pseudogenes are involved in important biological processes has excited enthusiasm and increased the research interest on them. An accurate detection and analysis of pseudogenes can be achieved using comparative methods, but only the use of phylogenetic tools can provide accurate information about their birth, their evolution and their death, hence about the impact that they have on genes and genomes. Here, phylogenetic methods that allow for studying pseudogene history are described
Pseudogenes are nonfunctional vestiges of genes. Investigating genes that were inactivated specifica...
Molecular investigations of evolutionary history are being used to study subjects as diverse as the ...
Pseudogenes are defined as non-functional relatives of genes whose protein-coding abilities are lost...
International audienceThe discovery that pseudogenes are involved in important biological processes ...
Pseudogenes are relics of former genes that no longer possess biological functions. They are abundan...
AbstractPseudogenes are commonly encountered during investigation of the genomes of a wide range of ...
Pseudogenes have been formed during evolution by duplication or retrotransposition. The origin, age,...
Over the last decade, methods have been developed for the reconstruction of gene trees that take int...
Pseudogenes are defined as fragments of once-functional genes that have been silenced by one or more...
Pseudogenes are defined as regions of the genome that contain defective copies of genes. They exist ...
Pseudogenes are genomic DNA sequences that are homologous to functional genes. They do not code prot...
The complete genome sequences with their annotations are a considerable resource in biology, partic...
Background Pseudogenes, nonfunctional copies of genes, evolve fast due the lack of evolutionary pre...
Arising from either retrotransposition or genomic duplication of functional genes, pseudogenes are "...
Arising from either retrotransposition or genomic duplication of functional genes, pseudogenes are “...
Pseudogenes are nonfunctional vestiges of genes. Investigating genes that were inactivated specifica...
Molecular investigations of evolutionary history are being used to study subjects as diverse as the ...
Pseudogenes are defined as non-functional relatives of genes whose protein-coding abilities are lost...
International audienceThe discovery that pseudogenes are involved in important biological processes ...
Pseudogenes are relics of former genes that no longer possess biological functions. They are abundan...
AbstractPseudogenes are commonly encountered during investigation of the genomes of a wide range of ...
Pseudogenes have been formed during evolution by duplication or retrotransposition. The origin, age,...
Over the last decade, methods have been developed for the reconstruction of gene trees that take int...
Pseudogenes are defined as fragments of once-functional genes that have been silenced by one or more...
Pseudogenes are defined as regions of the genome that contain defective copies of genes. They exist ...
Pseudogenes are genomic DNA sequences that are homologous to functional genes. They do not code prot...
The complete genome sequences with their annotations are a considerable resource in biology, partic...
Background Pseudogenes, nonfunctional copies of genes, evolve fast due the lack of evolutionary pre...
Arising from either retrotransposition or genomic duplication of functional genes, pseudogenes are "...
Arising from either retrotransposition or genomic duplication of functional genes, pseudogenes are “...
Pseudogenes are nonfunctional vestiges of genes. Investigating genes that were inactivated specifica...
Molecular investigations of evolutionary history are being used to study subjects as diverse as the ...
Pseudogenes are defined as non-functional relatives of genes whose protein-coding abilities are lost...