Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Differentially methylated regions (DMRs) are stretches of DNA in an organism’s genome that have different DNA methylation patterns compared to other samples. These samples can be different cells or tissues within the same individual, the same cell at different times, or cells from different individuals. (Note: this is different from histone modification.)DNA is methylated at a CpG site, which is a cytosine followed by a guanine. The “p” refers to the phosphate linker between them."@en }
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- Differentially_methylated_regions comment "Differentially methylated regions (DMRs) are stretches of DNA in an organism’s genome that have different DNA methylation patterns compared to other samples. These samples can be different cells or tissues within the same individual, the same cell at different times, or cells from different individuals. (Note: this is different from histone modification.)DNA is methylated at a CpG site, which is a cytosine followed by a guanine. The “p” refers to the phosphate linker between them.".
- Q14862240 comment "Differentially methylated regions (DMRs) are stretches of DNA in an organism’s genome that have different DNA methylation patterns compared to other samples. These samples can be different cells or tissues within the same individual, the same cell at different times, or cells from different individuals. (Note: this is different from histone modification.)DNA is methylated at a CpG site, which is a cytosine followed by a guanine. The “p” refers to the phosphate linker between them.".