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Tolerance towards comparably high sucrose concentrations has also been shown in other organisms, for example in Bacillus sp. or in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Belghith et al. 2012 Ando et al. 2006).
LFD increases with age in many organisms, for example, in nematode [ 2], human [ 22], and mouse retinal pigment epithelium [ 23].
A number of such genes have been reported in model organisms; for example, in Drosophila[ 3, 20] and in the mouse (Mus) [ 2, 21].
This is also different from distributions in other organisms; for example, in Trypanosoma brucei, control over glycolytic flux was found to be almost uniquely determined by the glucose transporter [87].
Some caution, therefore, should be exerted by users when using the information collected in the databases about the beginning of proteins in these organisms (for example in the Streptomyces coelicolor database, CoeliList).
This observation led Thurieaux [ 44] to suggest that recombination was confined largely to the coding regions, because all eukaryotes have approximately the same number of genes, as demonstrated by the genome sequences of various organisms (for example, in Arabidopsis[ 45], rice [ 46, 47], maize [ 48] and sorghum [ 49]), although other genomic features may affect recombination.
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Excretory/secretory proteins (ESPs) circulating throughout the body of an organism (for example, in the extracellular space) are localized to or released from the cell surface, making them readily accessible to drugs and/or the immune system.
Using short-read sequencing technologies, data sets containing large numbers of short blocks can easily be obtained for any organism, for example in the form of low-coverage fragmented genome assemblies, restriction site associated DNA (RAD), or transcriptome data (e.g., Davey et al. 2011; McCormack et al. 2013; Hearn et al. 2014).
Indeed, the methodology suffers the typical PCR biases, such as (i) the misincorporation of nucleotides (which would lead to the overestimation of sequence diversity); (ii) the differential amplification of the same gene from different organisms (true for example in the case of 16S genes whose number of copies in the genome varies among taxa [88]); and (iii) the formation of chimeric artifacts.
Telomeric DNA is formed by tandem repeats of very few variants of minisatellite sequence motifs TnAmGo that are conserved in individual groups of organisms, for example, TTAGGG in vertebrates and fungi (designed here as the human type), TTTAGGG in plants (Arabidopsis type), or TTAGG in insects (Richards and Ausubel 1988; Meyne et al. 1989; Okazaki et al. 1993).
Nevertheless, other forms of epigenetic inheritance exist in single cell organisms, for example inheritance of prions in yeast, epigenetic inheritance of chromatin modifications that has been specifically studied in fission yeast, and inheritance of regulatory RNAs in ciliates.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com