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Yutaka Suzuki

Researcher at University of Tokyo

Publications -  875
Citations -  42146

Yutaka Suzuki is an academic researcher from University of Tokyo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 85, co-authored 767 publications receiving 35471 citations. Previous affiliations of Yutaka Suzuki include Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development & Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe.

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Long terminal repeats power evolution of genes and gene expression programs in mammalian oocytes and zygotes.

TL;DR: An extraordinary impact of a group of LTRs from the mammalian endogenous retrovirus-related ERVL retrotransposon class on gene expression in the germline and beyond is reported, which offers means for a comprehensive survey of the genome's expression potential.
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Condensin targets and reduces unwound DNA structures associated with transcription in mitotic chromosome condensation.

TL;DR: It is shown that condensin, which is essential for assembling condensed chromosomes, helps to preclude the detrimental effects of gene transcription on mitotic condensation and is associated with and reduces unwound DNA segments generated by transcription, providing a direct link between an in vitro activity of condens in and its in vivo function.
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Targeted disruption of LIG-1 gene results in psoriasiform epidermal hyperplasia1

TL;DR: The gene encoding a transmembrane glycoprotein LIG-1, of which the extracellular region was organized with the leucine-rich repeats and immunoglobulin-like domains, was disrupted in mice by gene targeting as mentioned in this paper.
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The first murine zygotic transcription is promiscuous and uncoupled from splicing and 3′ processing

TL;DR: The authors found that 1-cell embryos are highly promiscuous, such that intergenic regions are extensively expressed and thousands of genes are transcribed at comparably low levels, and that transcription can occur in the absence of defined core-promoter elements.
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Analysis of Small Human Proteins Reveals the Translation of Upstream Open Reading Frames of mRNAs

TL;DR: This investigation provides the first direct evidence of translation of upstream ORFs in human cells, which could greatly change the current outline of the human proteome.