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The metabolic network is composed of enzymatic reactions (ERs) in which one or more enzymes catalyze the reaction of pertinent substrates. Since metabolism is a basal system for maintaining life of all organisms, any change in the metabolic networks must greatly affect organismic evolution. The aim of this study is to examine how often gains and losses of ER have occurred during the evolution of metabolic...
The evolution of penguins has been investigated extensively, although inconclusively, by morphologists, biogeographers and molecular phylogeneticists. We investigated this issue using retroposon analysis of insertions of CR1, which is a member of the LINE (long interspersed element) family, in the genomes of penguins and penguin relatives. The retroposon method is a powerful tool for identifying monophyletic...
SmaI is a short interspersed element (SINE) of the salmon genome, and is derived from tRNA Lys . We probed the secondary structure of SmaI SINE RNA by enzymatic cleavage and found that the RNA structure comprises three separate domains. The 5′-terminal region (the 5′ domain) forms a tRNA-like cloverleaf structure, whereas the 3′-terminal region (the 3′ domain) forms an extended stem-loop....
Alu elements are the most active and predominant type of short interspersed elements (SINEs) in the human genome. Recently inserted polymorphic (for presence/absence) Alu elements contribute to genome diversity among different human populations, and they are useful genetic markers for population genetic studies. The objective of this study is to identify polymorphic Alu insertions through an in silico...
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are endogenous ∼22-nucleotide (nt) non-coding RNAs that post-transcriptionally regulate the expression of target genes via hybridization to target mRNA. Using known pairs of miRNA and target mRNA in Caenorhabditis elegans, we first performed computational analysis for specific hybridization patterns between these two RNAs. We counted the numbers of perfectly complementary dinucleotide...
Parsimony and Bayesian methods have been developed for detecting positively selected amino acid sites. It has been reported that the parsimony method is generally conservative. In contrast, the Bayesian method is known to identify more positively selected sites than the parsimony method, especially when the number of sequences analyzed is small, although the interpretation of results obtained from...
Long interspersed elements (LINEs) are a type of retroposon and are widely distributed in most eukaryotic genomes. LINEs are classified into two groups, the stringent type and relaxed type, based on the recognition of the 3′ tail of their own RNA by reverse transcriptase (RT) during retrotransposition. Although most LINEs are thought to belong to the stringent type, retrotransposition studies of the...
We present here a novel methodology for the identification of genome regions potentially spanning one or more protein coding genes. It is based on the detection of clusters of conserved sequence tags whose evolutionary dynamics, based on the observation of an excess bias of synonymous substitutions at nucleotide level and of conservative replacements at protein level, suggests a likely protein coding...
In previous work [Jabbari, K., Rayko, E., Bernardi, G., 2003. The major shifts of human duplicated genes. Gene 317, 203–208], we investigated the fate of ancient duplicated genes after the compositional transitions that occurred between the genomes of cold- and warm-blooded vertebrates. We found that the majority of duplicated copies were transposed to the “ancestral genome core”, the gene-dense genome...
Kynurenine aminotransferase (KAT) is an enzyme responsible for synthesis of kynurenic acid (KYNA), a well established neuroprotective and anticonvulsant agent, involved in synaptic transmission and implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia, Huntington's disease and other neurological disorders. We have shown previously that kat2 −/− mice had lower hippocampal KYNA levels and were...
To elucidate the evolutionary process of the nervous system (NS) in metazoa, we examined the relationship between human genes specifically expressed in the NS (NS-specific genes) and the time of their evolutionary emergence. We obtained 255 human NS-specific genes from the gene expression data of the human full-length cDNA annotation invitational (H-invitational) database. To determine when these...
Novel tools are needed for comprehensive comparisons of interspecies characteristics of massive amounts of genomic sequences currently available. An unsupervised neural network algorithm, Self-Organizing Map (SOM), is an effective tool for clustering and visualizing high-dimensional complex data on a single map. We modified the conventional SOM, on the basis of batch-learning SOM, for genome informatics...
We analyze minisatellites derived from Alu fragments corresponding approximately to the first 44 bases of human Alu consensus sequences from different subfamilies. The origin of Alu-derived minisatellites appears to have been mediated by short flanking repeats, as first proposed by Haber and Louis [Haber, J.E., Louis, E.J., 1998. Minisatellite origins in yeast and humans. Genomics 48, 132–135.]. We...
Human T-cell lymphotropic viruses (HTLV) types I and II are closely related oncogenic retroviruses that have been associated with lymphoproliferative and neurological disorders. The proviral genome encodes a trans-regulatory Tax protein that activates viral genes and upregulates various cellular genes involved in both cell growth and transformation. Tax proteins of HTLV-I (Tax-I) and HTLV-II (Tax-II)...
Transposable elements (TEs) are major components of eukaryotic genomes, contributing about 50% to the size of mammalian genomes. TEs serve as recombination hot spots and may acquire specific cellular functions, such as controlling protein translation and gene transcription. The latter is the subject of the analysis presented. We scanned TE sequences located in promoter regions of all annotated genes...
For ribosomal protein (RP) genes the start of transcription is rigidly controlled to maintain the 5′-TOP signal on the messenger RNA. The responsible regulatory mechanism is not yet fully understood. Careful comparative analysis of their proximal promoter sequences reveals common characteristics and thus provides clues to the underlying mechanism.We have extracted the proximal promoters of the 80...
Many vertebrate species use ultraviolet (UV) vision for such behaviors as mating, foraging, and communication. UV vision is mediated by UV-sensitive visual pigments, which have the wavelengths of maximal absorption (λ max ) at ∼360 nm, whereas violet (or blue) vision is mediated by orthologous pigments with λ max values of 390–440 nm. It is widely believed that amino acids in transmembrane...
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