The developmental transcriptome of Drosophila melanogaster
Nature 471, 7339 (2011). doi:10.1038/nature09715
Authors: Brenton R. Graveley, Angela N. Brooks, Joseph W. Carlson, Michael O. Duff, Jane M. Landolin, Li Yang, Carlo G. Artieri, Marijke J. van Baren, Nathan Boley, Benjamin W. Booth, James B. Brown, Lucy Cherbas, Carrie A. Davis, Alex Dobin, Renhua Li, Wei Lin, John H. Malone, Nicolas R. Mattiuzzo, David Miller, David Sturgill, Brian B. Tuch, Chris Zaleski, Dayu Zhang, Marco Blanchette, Sandrine Dudoit, Brian Eads, Richard E. Green, Ann Hammonds, Lichun Jiang, Phil Kapranov, Laura Langton, Norbert Perrimon, Jeremy E. Sandler, Kenneth H. Wan, Aarron Willingham, Yu Zhang, Yi Zou, Justen Andrews, Peter J. Bickel, Steven E. Brenner, Michael R. Brent, Peter Cherbas, Thomas R. Gingeras, Roger A. Hoskins, Thomas C. Kaufman, Brian Oliver & Susan E. Celniker
Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most well studied genetic model organisms; nonetheless, its genome still contains unannotated coding and non-coding genes, transcripts, exons and RNA editing sites. Full discovery and annotation are pre-requisites for understanding how the regulation of transcription, splicing and RNA
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