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  2. Group I catalytic intron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_I_catalytic_intron

    Splicing of group I introns is processed by two sequential transesterification reactions. [3] First an exogenous guanosine or guanosine nucleotide (exoG) docks onto the active G-binding site located in P7, and then its 3'-OH is aligned to attack the phosphodiester bond at the "upstream" (closer to the 5' end) splice site located in P1, resulting in a free 3'-OH group at the upstream exon and ...

  3. Exon shuffling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exon_shuffling

    Exon shuffling was first introduced in 1978 when Walter Gilbert discovered that the existence of introns could play a major role in the evolution of proteins. [3] It was noted that recombination within introns could help assort exons independently and that repetitive segments in the middle of introns could create hotspots for recombination to shuffle the exonic sequences.

  4. List of sequence alignment software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sequence_alignment...

    Can use quality scores, intron lengths, and computation splice site predictions to perform and performs an unbiased alignment. Can be trained to the specifics of a RNA-seq experiment and genome. Useful for splice site/intron discovery and for gene model building. (See PALMapper for a faster version). Yes, client-server Free, GPL 2 RazerS

  5. Exon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exon

    An exon is any part of a gene that will form a part of the final mature RNA produced by that gene after introns have been removed by RNA splicing. The term exon refers to both the DNA sequence within a gene and to the corresponding sequence in RNA transcripts.

  6. RNA splicing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA_splicing

    This results in a mature messenger RNA with a missing section of an exon. In this way, a point mutation, which might otherwise affect only a single amino acid, can manifest as a deletion or truncation in the final protein. [citation needed] Intron Exon Boundary in pre-mRNA 1 - 3' Splice site 2 - Poly pyrimidine Tract 3 - Branch site 4 - 5 ...

  7. Mamba (deep learning architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamba_(deep_learning...

    To enable handling long data sequences, Mamba incorporates the Structured State Space sequence model (S4). [2] S4 can effectively and efficiently model long dependencies by combining continuous-time, recurrent, and convolutional models. These enable it to handle irregularly sampled data, unbounded context, and remain computationally efficient ...

  8. Group II intron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_II_intron

    Group II introns are found in rRNA, tRNA, and mRNA of organelles (chloroplasts and mitochondria) in fungi, plants, and protists, and also in mRNA in bacteria.The first intron to be identified as distinct from group I was the ai5γ group IIB intron, which was isolated in 1986 from a pre-mRNA transcript of the oxi 3 mitochondrial gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

  9. Exon junction complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exon_junction_complex

    An exon junction complex (EJC) is a protein complex which forms on a pre-messenger RNA strand at the junction of two exons which have been joined together during RNA splicing. The EJC has major influences on translation , surveillance , localization of the spliced mRNA , and m 6 A methylation .