Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "In molecular biology, the protein domain, YTH refers to a member of the YTH family has been shown to selectively remove transcripts of meiosis-specific genes expressed in mitotic cells.This protein domain, the YTH-domain, is conserved across all eukaryotes and suggests that the conserved C-terminal region plays a critical role in relaying the cytosolic Ca-signals to the nucleus, thereby regulating gene expression."@en }
Showing triples 1 to 4 of
4
with 100 triples per page.
- YTH_protein_domain abstract "In molecular biology, the protein domain, YTH refers to a member of the YTH family has been shown to selectively remove transcripts of meiosis-specific genes expressed in mitotic cells.This protein domain, the YTH-domain, is conserved across all eukaryotes and suggests that the conserved C-terminal region plays a critical role in relaying the cytosolic Ca-signals to the nucleus, thereby regulating gene expression.".
- Q8046040 abstract "In molecular biology, the protein domain, YTH refers to a member of the YTH family has been shown to selectively remove transcripts of meiosis-specific genes expressed in mitotic cells.This protein domain, the YTH-domain, is conserved across all eukaryotes and suggests that the conserved C-terminal region plays a critical role in relaying the cytosolic Ca-signals to the nucleus, thereby regulating gene expression.".
- YTH_protein_domain comment "In molecular biology, the protein domain, YTH refers to a member of the YTH family has been shown to selectively remove transcripts of meiosis-specific genes expressed in mitotic cells.This protein domain, the YTH-domain, is conserved across all eukaryotes and suggests that the conserved C-terminal region plays a critical role in relaying the cytosolic Ca-signals to the nucleus, thereby regulating gene expression.".
- Q8046040 comment "In molecular biology, the protein domain, YTH refers to a member of the YTH family has been shown to selectively remove transcripts of meiosis-specific genes expressed in mitotic cells.This protein domain, the YTH-domain, is conserved across all eukaryotes and suggests that the conserved C-terminal region plays a critical role in relaying the cytosolic Ca-signals to the nucleus, thereby regulating gene expression.".