نتایج جستجو برای: l1 retrotransposon

تعداد نتایج: 34435  

2018
Jongsu Choi Sung-Yeon Hwang Kwangseog Ahn

Long interspersed nuclear element 1 is an autonomous non-long terminal repeat retrotransposon that comprises ∼17% of the human genome. Its spontaneous retrotransposition and the accumulation of heritable L1 insertions can potentially result in genome instability and sporadic disorders. Moloney leukemia virus 10 homolog (MOV10), a putative RNA helicase, has been implicated in inhibiting L1 repli...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2013
Prabhat K Mandal Adam D Ewing Dustin C Hancks Haig H Kazazian

Long INterspersed Elements (LINE-1s, L1s) are responsible for over one million retrotransposon insertions and 8000 processed pseudogenes (PPs) in the human genome. An active L1 encodes two proteins (ORF1p and ORF2p) that bind with L1 RNA and form L1-ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs). Although it is believed that the RNA-binding property of ORF1p is critical to recruit other mobile RNAs to the ...

2007
Kostas Repanas Nora Zingler Liliana E. Layer Gerald G. Schumann Anastassis Perrakis Oliver Weichenrieder

The human LINE-1 endonuclease (L1-EN) is the targeting endonuclease encoded by the human LINE-1 (L1) retrotransposon. L1-EN guides the genomic integration of new L1 and Alu elements that presently account for approximately 28% of the human genome. L1-EN bears considerable technological interest, because its target selectivity may ultimately be engineered to allow the site-specific integration o...

2014
Stephen Ohms Sung-Hun Lee Danny Rangasamy

Long interspersed nuclear element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) retrotransposons are insertional mutagens capable of altering the genomic landscape in many ways. Activation of the normally silent LINE-1 retrotransposon is associated with a high level of cancer-associated DNA damage and genomic instability. Studies of LINE-1 have so far focused mainly on changes in gene expression, and our knowledge of its i...

2007
Nicole Gabriele Coufal Fred H. Gage Lawrence Goldstein Anirvan Ghosh Leanne Jones Adjit Varki Hans Juergen Coufal

Long interspersed nuclear (L1) elements are highly abundant in the human genome; however, their impact on the level of the individual is largely unknown. Here we show that human neural stem cells (NSCs) derived from both fetal brain and from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) can support retrotransposition of an engineered L1 in vitro. These events occur in NSCs with the potential to differenti...

Journal: :Nucleic Acids Research 2005
Harris S. Soifer Adriana Zaragoza Maany Peyvan Mark A. Behlke John J. Rossi

Long interspersed nuclear elements (LINE-1 or L1) comprise 17% of the human genome, although only 80-100 L1s are considered retrotransposition-competent (RC-L1). Despite their small number, RC-L1s are still potential hazards to genome integrity through insertional mutagenesis, unequal recombination and chromosome rearrangements. In this study, we provide several lines of evidence that the LINE-...

2017
Peng Zhang Anne K Ludwig Florian D Hastert Cathia Rausch Anne Lehmkuhl Ines Hellmann Martha Smets Heinrich Leonhardt M Cristina Cardoso

One of the major functions of DNA methylation is the repression of transposable elements, such as the long-interspersed nuclear element 1 (L1). The underlying mechanism(s), however, are unclear. Here, we addressed how retrotransposon activation and mobilization are regulated by methyl-cytosine modifying ten-eleven-translocation (Tet) proteins and how this is modulated by methyl-CpG binding doma...

Journal: :Genome research 2017
Sandra R Richardson Patricia Gerdes Daniel J Gerhardt Francisco J Sanchez-Luque Gabriela-Oana Bodea Martin Muñoz-Lopez J Samuel Jesuadian Marie-Jeanne H C Kempen Patricia E Carreira Jeffrey A Jeddeloh Jose L Garcia-Perez Haig H Kazazian Adam D Ewing Geoffrey J Faulkner

LINE-1 (L1) retrotransposons are a noted source of genetic diversity and disease in mammals. To expand its genomic footprint, L1 must mobilize in cells that will contribute their genetic material to subsequent generations. Heritable L1 insertions may therefore arise in germ cells and in pluripotent embryonic cells, prior to germline specification, yet the frequency and predominant developmental...

Journal: :Genome research 2017
Angela Macia Thomas J Widmann Sara R Heras Veronica Ayllon Laura Sanchez Meriem Benkaddour-Boumzaouad Martin Muñoz-Lopez Alejandro Rubio Suyapa Amador-Cubero Eva Blanco-Jimenez Javier Garcia-Castro Pablo Menendez Philip Ng Alysson R Muotri John L Goodier Jose L Garcia-Perez

Half the human genome is made of transposable elements (TEs), whose ongoing activity continues to impact our genome. LINE-1 (or L1) is an autonomous non-LTR retrotransposon in the human genome, comprising 17% of its genomic mass and containing an average of 80-100 active L1s per average genome that provide a source of inter-individual variation. New LINE-1 insertions are thought to accumulate m...

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