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I. King Jordan

Researcher at Georgia Institute of Technology

Publications -  176
Citations -  8480

I. King Jordan is an academic researcher from Georgia Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Genome. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 159 publications receiving 7587 citations. Previous affiliations of I. King Jordan include Buck Institute for Research on Aging & University of Georgia.

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Origin of a substantial fraction of human regulatory sequences from transposable elements.

TL;DR: Transposable elements (TEs) are abundant in mammalian genomes and have potentially contributed to their hosts' evolution by providing novel regulatory or coding sequences.
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Essential Genes Are More Evolutionarily Conserved Than Are Nonessential Genes in Bacteria

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combine genomic sequence data with experimental knockout data to compare the rates of evolution and the levels of selection for essential versus nonessential bacterial genes, finding that essential bacterial genes appear to be more conserved than are nonessential genes over both relatively short (microevolutionary) and longer (macroevolutional) time scales.
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On the presence and role of human gene-body DNA methylation

TL;DR: A model holds that the repression of intragenic transcription by gene- body methylation is largely epiphenomenal, and suggests that gene-body methylation levels are predominantly shaped via the accessibility of the DNA to methylating enzyme complexes.
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Origin and Evolution of Human microRNAs From Transposable Elements

TL;DR: The results indicate that TEs provide a natural mechanism for the origination miRNAs that can contribute to regulatory divergence between species as well as a rich source for the discovery of as yet unknown miRNA genes.
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A family of human microRNA genes from miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements.

TL;DR: Members of a recently discovered family of human miRNA genes, hsa-mir-548, are derived from Made1 transposable elements, and it is proposed that MITEs may represent an evolutionary link between siRNAs and miRNAs.