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Dr. Farkas-Pool, Carlos
Nombre de publicación
Dr. Farkas-Pool, Carlos
Nombre completo
Farkas Pool, Carlos Alejandro
Facultad
Email
cfarkas@ucsc.cl
ORCID
2 results
Research Outputs
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- PublicationIs IIIG9 a new protein with exclusive ciliary function? Analysis of its potential role in cancer and other pathologies(MDPI, 2022)
; ;Oviedo, MarÃa ;RamÃrez, Eder ;Cifuentes, Manuel ;Mella, Andy ;Bertinat, Romina ;Gajardo, Roberto ;Ferrada, Luciano ;Jara, Nery ;De Lima, Isabelle ;MartÃnez, Fernando ;Nualart, FranciscoSalazar, KatterineThe identification of new proteins that regulate the function of one of the main cellular phosphatases, protein phosphatase 1 (PP1), is essential to find possible pharmacological targets to alter phosphatase function in various cellular processes, including the initiation and development of multiple diseases. IIIG9 is a regulatory subunit of PP1 initially identified in highly polarized ciliated cells. In addition to its ciliary location in ependymal cells, we recently showed that IIIG9 has extraciliary functions that regulate the integrity of adherens junctions. In this review, we perform a detailed analysis of the expression, localization, and function of IIIG9 in adult and developing normal brains. In addition, we provide a 3D model of IIIG9 protein structure for the first time, verifying that the classic structural and conformational characteristics of the PP1 regulatory subunits are maintained. Our review is especially focused on finding evidence linking IIIG9 dysfunction with the course of some pathologies, such as ciliopathies, drug dependence, diseases based on neurological development, and the development of specific high-malignancy and -frequency brain tumors in the pediatric population. Finally, we propose that IIIG9 is a relevant regulator of PP1 function in physiological and pathological processes in the CNS. - Publicationannotate_my_genomes: an easy-to-use pipeline to improve genome annotation and uncover neglected genes by hybrid RNA sequencing(GigaScience, 2022)
; ;Recabal, Antonia ;Mella, Andy ;Candia-Herrera, Daniel ;González-Olivero, Maryori ;Jonathan-Haigh, Jody ;Tarifeño-Saldivia, EstefanÃaCaprile, TeresaBackground: The advancement of hybrid sequencing technologies is increasingly expanding genome assemblies that are often annotated using hybrid sequencing transcriptomics, leading to improved genome characterization and the identification of novel genes and isoforms in a wide variety of organisms. Results: We developed an easy-to-use genome-guided transcriptome annotation pipeline that uses assembled transcripts from hybrid sequencing data as input and distinguishes between coding and long non-coding RNAs by integration of several bioinformatic approaches, including gene reconciliation with previous annotations in GTF format. We demonstrated the efficiency of this approach by correctly assembling and annotating all exons from the chicken SCO-spondin gene (containing more than 105 exons), including the identification of missing genes in the chicken reference annotations by homology assignments. Conclusions: Our method helps to improve the current transcriptome annotation of the chicken brain. Our pipeline, implemented on Anaconda/Nextflow and Docker is an easy-to-use package that can be applied to a broad range of species, tissues, and research areas helping to improve and reconcile current annotations. The code and datasets are publicly available at https://github.com/cfark as/annotate_my_genomes