Javier Lopez
![Javier Lopez](/assets/img/authors/javier-lopez.jpg)
Javier Lopez
Javier Alfonso Lópezis a Puerto Rican-born professional baseball pitcher for the San Francisco Giants of Major League Baseball. He is 6 feet 5 inchestall and weighs 220 pounds. López previously pitched for the Colorado Rockies, Arizona Diamondbacks, Boston Red Soxand Pittsburgh Pirates. He is a left-handed specialist known for his sidearm delivery. He also bats left-handed...
ProfessionBaseball Player
Date of Birth11 July 1977
CitySan Juan, PR
advantages among certain control correct form functional generating generation help interfere large might points prevents processing promoting provides removal specific stimulate striking structural structures variation
The striking evolutionary conservation of ratchetting points suggests that recursive splicing provides specific advantages for large introns, ... One possibility is that recursive splicing prevents the generation of long RNA transcripts that could form structures that interfere with correct processing into mRNA. Another is that recursive splicing might help stimulate transcription through long introns by promoting interactions between the splicing and transcription machineries. We also know already that recursive splicing is used to control the removal of certain exons from mRNAs, generating structural and functional variation among the gene products.
cars days fast liked retro tail takes wife
I've always liked that retro sound. It takes you back to the days of big, fast cars with tail fins. My wife (Liz) and I always try to see the Rev. when he is in a nearby city.
hogs stepping
That's just our hogs stepping up the occasion.
competition
From what they told everyone, that's the way it's going to be--open competition.
clues events final found involve large leave multiple smaller steps work
We found that many large introns are removed by multiple recursive splicing steps, ... These steps involve the sequential excision of smaller subfragments. Our work also indicates that most recursive splicing events leave no clues in the final mRNA. This is why they have not been detected before now.