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The Developmental Transcriptome of Drosophila Melanogaster

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2011

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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Graveley, Brenton R., Angela N. Brooks, Joseph W. Carlson, Michael O. Duff, Jane M. Landolin, Li Yang, Carlo G. Artieri et al. "The Developmental Transcriptome of Drosophila Melanogaster." Nature 471, no. 7339 (2011): 473-479. DOI: 10.1038/nature09715

Abstract

Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most well studied genetic model organisms, nonetheless its genome still contains unannotated coding and non-coding genes, transcripts, exons, and RNA editing sites. Full discovery and annotation are prerequisites for understanding how the regulation of transcription, splicing, and RNA editing directs development of this complex organism. We used RNA-Seq, tiling microarrays, and cDNA sequencing to explore the transcriptome in 30 distinct developmental stages. We identified 111,195 new elements, including thousands of genes, coding and non-coding transcripts, exons, splicing and editing events and inferred protein isoforms that previously eluded discovery using established experimental, prediction and conservation-based approaches. Together, these data substantially expand the number of known transcribed elements in the Drosophila genome and provide a high-resolution view of transcriptome dynamics throughout development.

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Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES::Biology::Cell and molecular biology::Genetics

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