Relating enhancer genetic variation across mammals to complex phenotypes using machine learning science.org/doi/10.1126/scienc

I ♥️ 🛏️⚒️ !
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RT @aaronquinlan
It's been a while, but version 2.31.0 of is out!

This includes a new "summary" command for basic stats, sanity checks, and QC on interval files.

It also supports gzipped FASTA files. Thanks to @brent_p, @38, @jomarnz for their contributions. bedtools.readthedocs.io/en/lat
twitter.com/aaronquinlan/statu

RT @transposlav
A Ukrainian PhD student here searching for a place abroad to finish the experimental part of her PhD thesis. She's specialized in MolBiol, RNA-biology, neuroscience; but she is willing to adjust the topic according to the hosting lab.
Does anyone have a lead? twitter.com/OctavianAnima/stat

RT @BrancoLab
It is finally out (in a peer-reviewed journal)! Our contribution to teasing out human placental gene regulation by . Led by the awesome @neverlethetruth.
nature.com/articles/s41594-023

RT @hub_te
update, tomorrow: Wednesday the 8th at 9a PST // 12p EST // 6p CEST

You can find the Zoom link in the -hub channel on TransposonsWorldwide Slack.

Join us to discuss developments of resources for TE Hub

@trinsec those 'repeats' are actually repeats of transposons which are for most part selfish... So unfortunately they can't be seen as a backup of the genome, more of a parasite that sometimes may evolve as a partner.

@trinsec it's very hard to predict! But transposons can be both good and evil, so the more there are, and the more are still active (usually many have been rendered inactive, like in our genome) the more 'anything' can happen. Active transposons create change in the DNA, this is evolution! I may lead to pathologies and cancer (nature.com/articles/nrc.2017.3) but indeed, sometimes it can lead to cancer resistance! nature.com/articles/s41590-021

What the hell!!! 🤯
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RT @CedricFeschotte
This cutie is the Antarctic krill. Its genome is 48 Gb, 15x the human genome! 92% repeats! CMC/CACTA elements, an enigmatic and relatively rare group of DNA transposons in other animals, alone account for 42%!! Why these and why in krill?…🤔😯🤯
cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8
twitter.com/CedricFeschotte/st

RT @HarmitMalik
I’m putting this disclaimer in all my preprints from now on

Congrats @OggenfussUrsula et al!
: Recent transposable element bursts are associated with the proximity to genes in a fungal pla ... dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pp

Stop everything and read this 👇(especially if "gene enrichment analysis" rings a 🔔)
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RT @mdziemann
I want to talk today about a methodological issue in research that has been around a long time but is still a major problem.
The reason is that today I reviewed another manuscript that has this exact problem.
twitter.com/mdziemann/status/1

🌿👾 friends: I'm looking for a good dataset to benchmark a program detecting insertion polymorphisms. Ideally the samples would have different type of raw sequencing (long+short reads), and a trusted list of known insertion polymorphisms. Open to collab! 🤝

Reproducible evaluation of short-read transposable element detectors and species-wide data mining of insertion patterns in yeast biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/20

RT @GonzalezLab_BCN
Thanks to @GonzalezLab_BCN present and past members, the @ERC_Research, @Dros_EU, @LCATMon and all the students, teachers, and citizens of ! for promoting the role of ! twitter.com/ERC_Research/statu

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