Roberta Roberto
University of Bari
19 Papers
121 Citations
Roberta Roberto is an academic researcher from University of Bari. The author has contributed to research in topics: Synteny & Genome. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 17 publications.
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Papers
Comparative and demographic analysis of orang-utan genomes.
Devin P. Locke,LaDeana W. Hillier,Wesley C. Warren,Kim C. Worley,Lynne V. Nazareth,Donna M. Muzny,Shiaw-Pyng Yang,Zhengyuan Wang,Asif T. Chinwalla,Patrick Minx,Makedonka Mitreva,Lisa Cook,Kim D. Delehaunty,Catrina Fronick,Heather Schmidt,Lucinda Fulton,Robert S. Fulton,Joanne O. Nelson,Vincent Magrini,Craig Pohl,Tina Graves,Chris Markovic,Andy Cree,Huyen Dinh,Jennifer Hume,Christie Kovar,Gerald R. Fowler,Gerton Lunter,Gerton Lunter,Stephen Meader,Andreas Heger,Chris P. Ponting,Tomas Marques-Bonet,Tomas Marques-Bonet,Can Alkan,Lin Chen,Ze Cheng,Jeffrey M. Kidd,Evan E. Eichler,Evan E. Eichler,Simon D. M. White,Stephen M. J. Searle,Albert J. Vilella,Yuan Chen,Paul Flicek,Jian Ma,Jian Ma,Brian J. Raney,Bernard B. Suh,Richard Burhans,Javier Herrero,David Haussler,Rui Faria,Rui Faria,Olga Fernando,Olga Fernando,Fleur Darré,Domènec Farré,Elodie Gazave,Meritxell Oliva,Arcadi Navarro,Roberta Roberto,Oronzo Capozzi,Nicoletta Archidiacono,Giuliano Della Valle,Stefania Purgato,Mariano Rocchi,Miriam K. Konkel,Jerilyn A. Walker,Brygg Ullmer,Mark A. Batzer,Arian F.A. Smit,Robert Hubley,Claudio Casola,Daniel R. Schrider,Matthew W. Hahn,Víctor Quesada,Xose S. Puente,Gonzalo R. Ordóñez,Carlos López-Otín,Tomas Vinar,Brona Brejova,Aakrosh Ratan,Robert S. Harris,Webb Miller,Carolin Kosiol,Heather A. Lawson,Vikas Taliwal,André L. Martins,Adam Siepel,Arindam RoyChoudhury,Xin Ma,Jeremiah D. Degenhardt,Carlos Bustamante,Ryan N. Gutenkunst,Thomas Mailund,Julien Y. Dutheil,Asger Hobolth,Mikkel H. Schierup,Oliver A. Ryder,Yuko Yoshinaga,Pieter J. de Jong,George M. Weinstock,Jeffrey Rogers,Elaine R. Mardis,Richard A. Gibbs,Richard K. Wilson +106 more
TL;DR: The orang-utan species, Pongo abelii and Pongo pygmaeus, are the most phylogenetically distant great apes from humans, thereby providing an informative perspective on hominid evolution and a primate polymorphic neocentromere, found in both Pongo species are described.
A new grapevine virus discovered by deep sequencing of virus- and viroid-derived small RNAs in Cv Pinot gris.
Annalisa Giampetruzzi,Vahid Roumi,Roberta Roberto,U. Malossini,Nobuyuki Yoshikawa,Pierfederico La Notte,Federica Terlizzi,Rino Credi,Pasquale Saldarelli +8 more
TL;DR: A limited field survey for the presence of GPGV in diseased and symptomless plants from three different cultivars did not allow to clearly associating the virus to the observed symptoms, but molecular differences with GINV are wide enough to warrant classification of the virus in question as a new species.
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Tracking the complex flow of chromosome rearrangements from the Hominoidea Ancestor to extant Hylobates and Nomascus Gibbons by high-resolution synteny mapping
Doriana Misceo,Oronzo Capozzi,Roberta Roberto,Maria Pia Dell'Oglio,Mariano Rocchi,Roscoe Stanyon,Nicoletta Archidiacono +6 more
TL;DR: This study characterized the extension, reciprocal arrangement, and orientation of syntenic chromosomal segments in the lar gibbon by hybridization of a panel of approximately 1000 human BAC clones, consistent with the hypothesis that the genus Hylobates is the most recently evolved lesser ape genus.
CYP3 phylogenomics: evidence for positive selection of CYP3A4 and CYP3A7.
Huan Qiu,Stefan Taudien,Holger Herlyn,Juergen Schmitz,Yuan Zhou,Guopei Chen,Roberta Roberto,Mariano Rocchi,Matthias Platzer,Leszek Wojnowski +9 more
TL;DR: CYP3A7 and CYP3A4 may have acquired catalytic functions especially important for the evolution of hominoids and humans, respectively.
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Molecular Cytogenetic Resources for Chromosome 4 and Comparative Analysis of Phylogenetic Chromosome IV in Great Apes
R. Marzella,Luigi Viggiano,Valeria Miolla,Clelia Tiziana Storlazzi,A. Ricco,E. Gentile,Roberta Roberto,Cecilia Surace,Angelo Fratello,Mita Mancini,Nicoletta Archidiacono,Mariano Rocchi +11 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that all the pericentric inversions that differentiate chromosome IV in these species are distinct and that one of the breakpoints frequently lies very close to the centromere.
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