Abstract
Alu elements are short interspersed elements (SINEs) ∼300 nucleotides in length. More than 1 million Alus are found in the human genome. Despite their being genetically functionless, recent findings suggest that Alu elements may have a broad evolutionary impact by affecting gene structures, protein sequences, splicing motifs and expression patterns. Because of these effects, compiling a genomic database of Alu sequences that reside within protein-coding genes seemed a useful enterprise. Presently, such data are limited since the structural and positional information on genes and Alu sequences are scattered throughout incompatible and unconnected databases. AluGene (http://Alugene.tau.ac.il/) provides easy access to a complete Alu map of the human genome, as well as Alu-associated information. The Alu elements are annotated with respect to coding region and exon/intron location. This design facilitates queries on Alu sequences, locations, as well as motifs and compositional properties via a one-stop search page.
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CITATION STYLE
Dagan, T., Sorek, R., Sharon, E., Ast, G., & Graur, D. (2004). AluGene: A database of Alu elements incorporated within protein-coding genes. Nucleic Acids Research, 32(DATABASE ISS.). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkh132
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