Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(3)
Alu elements in the reverse orientation (minus strand) were reverse complimented to be viewed in BioEdit in the forward orientation.
Crystal structures of CRM1 bound to two different NESs with unusual sequences showed the NES peptides binding the CRM1 groove in the opposite orientation (minus) to that of previously studied NESs (plus).
1. Interpretation of the data: the authors claim that the conversion of microtubule orientation (minus end distal into plus end distal) in the kinesin-1 mutant is due to the microtubule transport function of kinesin-1, which might selectively transport minus-end microtubules to the distal end of the dendrite.
Similar(57)
At the end of the first paragraph of the introduction, the authors state "dendritic MTs exhibit a mixed orientation with minus-ends predominantly facing the distal dendrite…".
In contrast, in the third part of the repeat, the few insertions that occurred were mostly in the "minus" orientation.
N-terminal ΦXΦ motif generates a minus orientation PKINES-Flip mutant.
Enrichment was calculated for single and double motifs in both plus and minus orientation.
Two adjacent copies of the PISTILLATA gene were present in head-to-tail orientation on the minus strand of fosmid 76K13.
Whether an NES binds CRM1 in the plus or minus orientation is determined by the location of its ΦXΦ strand motif.
Five BACs, all of which were in the minus orientation, contained sequences that exactly matched the complementary sequence to Glean 24316, i.e. all contained the early termination codon.
The CRM1-bound hRio2NES and CPEB4NES structures unexpectedly revealed that both NESs bound the CRM1 groove in opposite orientation (termed the minus direction) compared to previous NES structures (PKINES, SNUPNNES, and RevNES bind in the plus direction).
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com