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Chandrashekhar P. Joshi

Researcher at Michigan Technological University

Publications -  68
Citations -  8995

Chandrashekhar P. Joshi is an academic researcher from Michigan Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Secondary cell wall. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 67 publications receiving 8333 citations. Previous affiliations of Chandrashekhar P. Joshi include Chonnam National University & National Chemical Laboratory.

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The genome of black cottonwood, Populus trichocarpa (Torr. & Gray)

Gerald A. Tuskan, +115 more
- 15 Sep 2006 - 
TL;DR: The draft genome of the black cottonwood tree, Populus trichocarpa, has been reported in this paper, with more than 45,000 putative protein-coding genes identified.
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An inspection of the domain between putative TATA box and translation start site in 79 plant genes

TL;DR: In a majority of the plants, the first AUG codon on processed mRNA acted as a translation initiation site and the consensus sequence for the context was TAAACAATGGCT (on plus strand of DNA), which differed from the earlier suggestion for eukaryotic mRNAs.
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Putative polyadenylation signals in nuclear genes of higher plants: a compilation and analysis

TL;DR: It was inferred that sequence motifs similar to poly (A) signals exist but some of them are in entirely different spatial relationship than observed in other eukaryotes, indicating their probable non-involvement in the process of polyadenylation in higher plants necessitating a functional analysis approach to define the plant specific poly (B) signals.
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Context sequences of translation initiation codon in plants

TL;DR: In this survey of 5074 plant genes for their AUG context sequences, purines are present at the _3 and +4 positions in about 80% of the sequences, which is similar to the vertebrate consensus sequence.

The genome of black cottonwood, Populus trichocarpa (Torr. & Gray) - eScholarship

TL;DR: Analyzing the draft genome of the black cottonwood tree, Populus trichocarpa, revealed a whole-genome duplication event; about 8000 pairs of duplicated genes from that event survived in the Populus genome.