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Michael Q. Zhang

Researcher at Tsinghua University

Publications -  396
Citations -  46412

Michael Q. Zhang is an academic researcher from Tsinghua University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Chromatin. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 378 publications receiving 42008 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Q. Zhang include Chinese Academy of Sciences & Peking Union Medical College Hospital.

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Comprehensive Identification of Cell Cycle–regulated Genes of the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae by Microarray Hybridization

TL;DR: A comprehensive catalog of yeast genes whose transcript levels vary periodically within the cell cycle is created, and it is found that the mRNA levels of more than half of these 800 genes respond to one or both of these cyclins.
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Integrative analysis of 111 reference human epigenomes

Anshul Kundaje, +123 more
- 19 Feb 2015 - 
TL;DR: It is shown that disease- and trait-associated genetic variants are enriched in tissue-specific epigenomic marks, revealing biologically relevant cell types for diverse human traits, and providing a resource for interpreting the molecular basis of human disease.
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Combinatorial patterns of histone acetylations and methylations in the human genome

TL;DR: The data suggest that a large number of histone modifications may act cooperatively to prepare chromatin for transcriptional activation and be associated with promoters and enhancers.
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ESEfinder: A web resource to identify exonic splicing enhancers.

TL;DR: ESEfinder (http://exon.cshl.edu/ESE/) is a web-based resource that facilitates rapid analysis of exon sequences to identify putative ESEs responsive to the human SR proteins SF2/ASF, SC35, SRp40 and SRp55, and to predict whether exonic mutations disrupt such elements.
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Analysis of the Vertebrate Insulator Protein CTCF-Binding Sites in the Human Genome

TL;DR: 13,804 CTCF-binding sites in potential insulators of the human genome are described, discovered experimentally in primary human fibroblasts and fit to a consensus motif highly conserved and suitable for predicting possible insulators driven by CTCf in other vertebrate genomes.