Gene duplication is one of the primary forces of evolutionary change. We present data from three different pericentromeric regions of human chromosomes, which indicate that such regions of the genome have been sites of recent genomic duplication. This form of duplication has involved the evolutionary movement of segments of genomic material, including both intronic and exonic sequence, from diverse regions of the genome toward the pericentromeric regions. Sequence analyses of the target sites of duplication have identified a novel class of interspersed GC-rich repeats located precisely at the boundaries of duplication. Estimates of the evolutionary age of these duplications indicate that they have occurred between 10 and 25 mya. In contrast...
We present a detailed molecular evolutionary analysis of 1.2 Mb from the pericentromeric region of h...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
Given that gene duplication is a major driving force of evolutionary change and the key mechanism un...
Gene duplication is one of the primary forces of evolutionary change. We present data from three dif...
Despite considerable advances in sequencing of the human genome over the past few years, the organiz...
Primate genomic sequence comparisons are becoming increasingly useful for elucidating the evolutiona...
Despite considerable advances in sequencing of the human genome over the past few years, the organiz...
The underlying mechanism by which the interspersed pattern of human segmental duplications has evolv...
Human segmental duplications are hotspots for nonallelic homologous recombination leading to genomic...
We have investigated the evolutionary history of the 4q35 paralogous region, and of a sub-family of ...
Compared with other sequenced animal genomes, human segmental duplications appear larger, more inter...
Item does not contain fulltextSubtelomeric duplications of an obscure tubulin "genic" segment locate...
Subtelomeric duplications of an obscure tubulin "genic" segment located near the telomere of human c...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...
Subtelomeric duplications of an obscure tubulin “genic” segment located near the telomere of human c...
We present a detailed molecular evolutionary analysis of 1.2 Mb from the pericentromeric region of h...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
Given that gene duplication is a major driving force of evolutionary change and the key mechanism un...
Gene duplication is one of the primary forces of evolutionary change. We present data from three dif...
Despite considerable advances in sequencing of the human genome over the past few years, the organiz...
Primate genomic sequence comparisons are becoming increasingly useful for elucidating the evolutiona...
Despite considerable advances in sequencing of the human genome over the past few years, the organiz...
The underlying mechanism by which the interspersed pattern of human segmental duplications has evolv...
Human segmental duplications are hotspots for nonallelic homologous recombination leading to genomic...
We have investigated the evolutionary history of the 4q35 paralogous region, and of a sub-family of ...
Compared with other sequenced animal genomes, human segmental duplications appear larger, more inter...
Item does not contain fulltextSubtelomeric duplications of an obscure tubulin "genic" segment locate...
Subtelomeric duplications of an obscure tubulin "genic" segment located near the telomere of human c...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...
Subtelomeric duplications of an obscure tubulin “genic” segment located near the telomere of human c...
We present a detailed molecular evolutionary analysis of 1.2 Mb from the pericentromeric region of h...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
Given that gene duplication is a major driving force of evolutionary change and the key mechanism un...