This is going to be the week I live up to my goal of an abstract a day a week, not 7 in one day!😂 So here's #AbstractWatch 49 on "Recurrent repeat expansions in human cancer genomes" https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05515-1 which used technology from this paper, which I hadn't seen "Synthetic transcription elongation factors license transcription across repressive chromatin" https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aan6414.
Recurrent repeat expansions in human cancer genomes - Nature

An atlas explores the landscape of recurrent repeat expansions in human cancer genomes.

Nature
#AbstractWatch Week 7 in the books! Once again I crammed through 7 days of abstracts TODAY. But it is something, right? Learned 7 new things, and am feeling very self-righteous about the effects of frequent, vigorous chores on my overall health. https://sciencewithangela.com/Blog/Week-7-in-the-books/#wbb1
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Week 6 of #AbstractWatch in the books https://sciencewithangela.com/Blog/Week-6-In-the-Books/#wbb1 and I just loved #PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN #MAMMALIAN CELLS #Nature https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05499-y Great #ResearchBriefing https://nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03629-0
summarizing The Problem, The Solution, Future Directions, Behind the Paper, Expert Opinion, and From the Editor.
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Please feel free to email or DM me with suggestions for #Abstractwatch https://sciencewithangela.com/Contact/ Thank you!!!
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Week 5 of #AbstractWatch in the books! https://sciencewithangela.com/Blog/Week-5-In-the-Books/#wbb1
Definitely one of my favorites was https://biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.11.10.516020v1 from Dr.
@Mill_lab
studying the mechanism of 'disc' recycling of #photoreceptors, revealed a likely mechanism of #retinitispigmentosa, which causes blindness.
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Today I'm reading this one for #AbstractWatch : https://nature.com/articles/s41467-022-33840-6 which is OA on Nat Comm, & was posted on biorxiv about 6 months earlier https://biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.05.20.106922v1 from Joan Han's lab
Whew - Week 4 of #AbstractWatch in the Books my friends! This week I vow to do one-a-day as intended rather than 7 on Sunday! https://sciencewithangela.com/Blog/Week-4-in-the-books/#wbb1 Two standouts: https://cell.com/cell-stem-cell/fulltext/S1934-5909(22)00376-9 and https://science.org/doi/10.1126/scitranslmed.abm6391 Enjoy
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Week 3 of #AbstractWatch is in the books! You know how when you feel low, you don't want to do the thing that you need most when you feel low? That's been me & #AbstractWatch this week. So I crammed today! Let's hope for high morale in week 4! Hugs to all you #sciencelovers https://sciencewithangela.com/Blog/Week-3-in-the-Books/#wbb1
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#AbstractWatch Hello my fellow Abstract Watchers! Week 2 in the books: 2 Nature papers, 2 Mol Cell papers, NCB, Sci Advances, eLife papers. Loved the 2 Mol Cell papers the most, both about phase separation (I know 😉) 4/7 papers had preprints, and the shortest times between preprint posting & publication were for Molecular Cell & Nature, longest time for eLife. I know this likely has to do with mandates but suggests something about the use or impact of preprints (to me) https://sciencewithangela.com/Blog/Week-2-in-the-Books/#wbb1
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#AbstractWatch 7 Opposing roles of hepatic stellate cell subpopulations in hepatocarcinogenesis https://nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05289-6
I'll consolidate this week's abstracts on the Blog on Sunday! Suffice it to say quiescent stellate cells good, activated stellate cells bad! 😀