Pseudouridine in small RNAs
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ABSTRACT: Pseudouridine is an isomer of uridine and is the most common RNA modification in both procaryotes and eucaryotes. It is found in ribosomal, transfer, and other structural RNA as well as in some mRNA and non-coding RNA. We have found abundant pseudouridine in small RNA and their precursors in Arabidopsis. This work was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R35GM144206), the National Science Foundation Plant Genome Research Program and the Robertson Research Foundation (to R.A.M.). Work in the Kouzarides laboratory is supported by a grant from Cancer Research UK (grant no. RG96894), in addition to benefiting from core support from the Wellcome Trust (WT203144) and Cancer Research UK (grant no. C6946/A24843). V.M. was funded by a Kay Kendall Leukemia Fund project grant (grant no. RG88664) and Cancer Research UK (grant no. RG96894). J.D. was funded by a grant from the Polish National Science Center (2020/39/D/NZ1/01918). We acknowledge assistance from the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Shared Resources, which are funded in part by the Cancer Center support grant (5PP30CA045508)
ORGANISM(S): Arabidopsis thaliana
PROVIDER: GSE222751 | GEO | 2023/08/07
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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