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Polina L. Perelman

Researcher at Novosibirsk State University

Publications -  82
Citations -  6065

Polina L. Perelman is an academic researcher from Novosibirsk State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Karyotype & Chromosome. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 74 publications receiving 5359 citations. Previous affiliations of Polina L. Perelman include National Institutes of Health & Russian Academy of Sciences.

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Tissue sampling methods and standards for vertebrate genomics.

TL;DR: This work provides a legal and methodological guide according to four standards of acquiring and storing tissue for the Genome 10K Project and similar initiatives as follows: four-star (banked tissue/cell cultures, RNA from multiple types of tissue for transcriptomes, and sufficient flash-frozen tissue for 1 mg of DNA, all from a single individual).
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Phylogenomics of the dog and fox family (Canidae, Carnivora) revealed by chromosome painting

TL;DR: The results allow the formulation of a likely Canidae ancestral karyotype (CAK, 2n = 82), and reveal that at least 6–24 chromosomal fission/fusion events are needed to convert the CAK karyotypes of the modern canids.
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Transcription of a protein-coding gene on B chromosomes of the Siberian roe deer (Capreolus pygargus)

TL;DR: Discovery of a large autosomal segment in all B chromosomes of the Siberian roe deer further corroborates the view of an autosomal origin for these elements and reinforces the view that supernumerary chromosomal elements might play an important role in genome evolution.
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Dog chromosome-specific paints reveal evolutionary inter- and intrachromosomal rearrangements in the American mink and human.

TL;DR: Comparison of the current dog/mink map with the published human/dog map discloses 23 cryptic intrachromosomal rearrangements in 10 regions of conserved synteny in the human and American mink genomes and thus further refined the human/ mink comparative genome map.
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Karyotype relationships between distantly related marsupials from South America and Australia.

TL;DR: Although the species studied diverged 70 million years ago, the karyotype of Monodelphis domestica is highly conserved in relation to those of Australian marsupials.