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Chem. Rev. 113, 8456-8490 (2013)
The smallest viable unit of life is the cell. From bacteria to mammals, all cells use the same nucleic acid-based universal code for the maintenance and inheritance of genetic information. All life on earth probably started with a common ancestral cell approximately 4 billion years ago. Today, a huge diversity of organisms live on Earth, many of them still at the evolutionary stage of unicellular organisms, while others are life forms of high complexity with large cell numbers. The development of this diversity was driven by evolution, a process assuring survival and adaption of life to new environmental challenges. While the first evolutionary processes were probably very simple genetic changes, these processes gradually became more sophisticated with the development of higher eukaryotes. The remaining major part of the genome, including all coding genes, is transcribed by RNAPII. It was first assumed that RNAPII transcription might be limited to genomic loci that give rise to messenger RNA (mRNA) or other stable transcripts.
Impact Factor
Scopus SNIP
Web of Science
Times Cited
Times Cited
Scopus
Cited By
Cited By
Altmetric
41.298
11.169
245
265
Anmerkungen
Besondere Publikation
Auf Hompepage verbergern
Publikationstyp
Artikel: Journalartikel
Dokumenttyp
Review
Schlagwörter
Pre-messenger-rna ; Bromodomain Protein Brd4 ; Serine 2 Phosphorylation ; Transcription In-vivo ; Recruits P-tefb ; Capping Enzyme Recruitment ; Histone H3k36 Methylation ; Gene-specific Requirement ; Cyclin-dependent Kinase ; Tata-binding Protein
Sprache
englisch
Veröffentlichungsjahr
2013
HGF-Berichtsjahr
2013
ISSN (print) / ISBN
0009-2665
e-ISSN
1520-6890
Zeitschrift
Chemical Reviews
Quellenangaben
Band: 113,
Heft: 11,
Seiten: 8456-8490
Verlag
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Begutachtungsstatus
Peer reviewed
POF Topic(s)
30504 - Mechanisms of Genetic and Environmental Influences on Health and Disease
Forschungsfeld(er)
Immune Response and Infection
PSP-Element(e)
G-501490-001
PubMed ID
23952966
WOS ID
WOS:000327103200007
Scopus ID
84888991588
Erfassungsdatum
2013-10-16