AbstractExon insertions and exon duplications, two major mechanisms of exon shuffling, are shown to involve modules that have introns of the same phase class at both their 5′- and 3′-ends. At the sites of intronic recombinations exon insertions and duplications create new introns which belong to the same phase class as the recipient introns. As a consequence of repeated exon insertions and exon duplications introns of a single phase class predominate in the resulting genes, i.e. gene assembly by exon shuffling is reflected both by this nonrandom intron phase usage and by the correlation between the domain organization of the proteins and exon-intron organization of their genes. Genes that appeared before the eukaryote-prokaryote split do no...
There is evidence that introns are basically ancient, though intron insertion events can also occur....
AbstractThe evolutionary origin of spliceosomal introns remains elusive. The startling success of a ...
The exon–intron structure of eukaryotic genes allows for phenomena such as alternative splicing, non...
AbstractExon insertions and exon duplications, two major mechanisms of exon shuffling, are shown to ...
AbstractWhat are the roles of ‘classical’ introns in the evolution of nuclear genes, and what was th...
AbstractA comparison of the nucleotide sequences around the splice junctions that flank old (shared ...
Introns are integral elements of eukaryotic genomes that perform various important functions and act...
AbstractClose analysis of intron phase – the position of introns within codons – is claimed to pro...
Exon shuffling has been characterized as one of the major evolutionary forces shaping both the genom...
AbstractWhat are the roles of ‘classical’ introns in the evolution of nuclear genes, and what was th...
Abstract. Exon-shuffling is an important mecha-nism accounting for the origin of many new proteins i...
Exon shuffling has been characterized as one of the major evolutionary forces shaping both the genom...
BACKGROUND: Most eukaryotic genes are interrupted by spliceosomal introns. The evolution of exon-int...
Intron phase is a conserved evolutionary character that refers to the location of introns relative t...
AbstractThe exon–intron structure of eukaryotic genes allows for phenomena such as alternative splic...
There is evidence that introns are basically ancient, though intron insertion events can also occur....
AbstractThe evolutionary origin of spliceosomal introns remains elusive. The startling success of a ...
The exon–intron structure of eukaryotic genes allows for phenomena such as alternative splicing, non...
AbstractExon insertions and exon duplications, two major mechanisms of exon shuffling, are shown to ...
AbstractWhat are the roles of ‘classical’ introns in the evolution of nuclear genes, and what was th...
AbstractA comparison of the nucleotide sequences around the splice junctions that flank old (shared ...
Introns are integral elements of eukaryotic genomes that perform various important functions and act...
AbstractClose analysis of intron phase – the position of introns within codons – is claimed to pro...
Exon shuffling has been characterized as one of the major evolutionary forces shaping both the genom...
AbstractWhat are the roles of ‘classical’ introns in the evolution of nuclear genes, and what was th...
Abstract. Exon-shuffling is an important mecha-nism accounting for the origin of many new proteins i...
Exon shuffling has been characterized as one of the major evolutionary forces shaping both the genom...
BACKGROUND: Most eukaryotic genes are interrupted by spliceosomal introns. The evolution of exon-int...
Intron phase is a conserved evolutionary character that refers to the location of introns relative t...
AbstractThe exon–intron structure of eukaryotic genes allows for phenomena such as alternative splic...
There is evidence that introns are basically ancient, though intron insertion events can also occur....
AbstractThe evolutionary origin of spliceosomal introns remains elusive. The startling success of a ...
The exon–intron structure of eukaryotic genes allows for phenomena such as alternative splicing, non...