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Wing-Kin Sung

Researcher at National University of Singapore

Publications -  335
Citations -  28128

Wing-Kin Sung is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Genome. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 327 publications receiving 26116 citations. Previous affiliations of Wing-Kin Sung include University of Hong Kong & Yale University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genome-wide mapping of Myc binding and gene regulation in serum-stimulated fibroblasts.

TL;DR: Of the 29 MDSR genes targeted by RNA interference, three showed a requirement for cell-cycle entry upon serum stimulation and 11 for long-term proliferation and/or survival, Hence, proper coordination of key regulatory and biosynthetic pathways following mitogenic stimulation relies upon the concerted regulation of multiple Myc-dependent genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breaking a Time-and-Space Barrier in Constructing Full-Text Indices

TL;DR: The above time-and-space barrier under the unit-cost word RAM is broken, and for the special case where $\log|\Sigma|=O((\log\log n)^{1-\epsilon})$, the authors can speed up their suffix array construction algorithm to the optimal $O(n)$.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Ultra-succinct representation of ordered trees

TL;DR: The first succinct tree representation supporting every one of the fundamental operations previously proposed for BP or DFUDS along with some new operations in constant time is given, its size surpasses the information-theoretic lower bound and matches the entropy of the tree based on the distribution of node degrees.
Journal ArticleDOI

Algorithms for Combining Rooted Triplets into a Galled Phylogenetic Network

TL;DR: It is proved that the problem of determining whether a given set $\T$ of rooted triplets can be merged without conflicts into a galled phylogenetic network and, if so, constructing such a network is NP-hard if extended to nondense inputs.
Journal ArticleDOI

ChIA-PET analysis of transcriptional chromatin interactions

TL;DR: Detailed procedures of the ChIA-PET methodology are described, unraveling transcription-associated chromatin contacts in a model human cell line, providing a global and unbiased interrogation of higher-order chromatin structures associated with specific protein factors.