Jun Chen
Xiamen University
14 Papers
123 Citations
Jun Chen is an academic researcher from Xiamen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Gene. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Jun Chen include Northwestern University.
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Papers
Poly A- transcripts expressed in HeLa cells.
Qingfa Wu,Yeong C. Kim,Jian Lu,Zhenyu Xuan,Jun Chen,Yonglan Zheng,Tom Zhou,Michael Q. Zhang,Chung-I Wu,San Ming Wang +9 more
TL;DR: This study provides the first large-scale sequence evidence for the presence of poly A- transcripts in eukaryotes and highlights the need for comprehensive identification of these transcripts for decoding the transcriptome, annotating the genome and studying biological relevance of the poly A - transcripts.
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A large quantity of novel human antisense transcripts detected by LongSAGE
TL;DR: This study analyzed the 632 813 unique human LongSAGE tags deposited in public databases to identify novel human antisense transcripts and constructed an antisense tag database that can be used to identify the antisense SAGE tags originated from the antisensing strand of known mRNA sequences included in the RefSeq database.
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Transcriptome Analysis of the Octopus vulgaris Central Nervous System
TL;DR: This study presents the first CNS transcriptome analysis of O. vulgaris and constructed the Phylogenetic tree using two genes related to CNS function, Synaptotagmin-7 and Synaptophysin, to accelerate the study of functional molecular neurobiology and comparative evolutionary biology.
Pyrosequencing of Haliotis diversicolor Transcriptomes: Insights into Early Developmental Molluscan Gene Expression
Zixia Huang,Zhi-Sen Chen,Caihuan Ke,Jing-jing Zhao,Weiwei You,Jie-Ni Zhang,Wei-Ting Dong,Jun Chen +7 more
TL;DR: A basic analysis of the larval transcriptomes and cluster of the gene expression profile indicates that each stage possesses a batch of specific genes that are indispensable during embryonic development, especially during the two-cell, trochophore and early postlarval stages.
Scanning the human genome at kilobase resolution
Jun Chen,Yeong C. Kim,Yong-Chul Jung,Zhenyu Xuan,Geoff Dworkin,Yanming Zhang,Michael Q. Zhang,San Ming Wang +7 more
TL;DR: The development of the DGS (Ditag Genome Scanning) technique for high-resolution analysis of genome structure is reported, showing that DGS provides a kilobase resolution for studying genome structure with high specificity and high genome coverage.