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. 2019 Dec 17;37(4):1165–1178. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msz300

FIg. 2.

FIg. 2.

Mouse-specific intergenic ORFs that are proximal to enhancers are more highly expressed and have greater expression stability than mouse-specific intergenic ORFs that are not proximal to enhancers or promoters. (A) Expression level of mouse-specific intergenic ORFs proximal to enhancers, promoters, or neither (“Null”) in liver, brain, and testis. (B) Expression stability of mouse-specific intergenic ORFs proximal to enhancers, promoters, or neither (“Null”) in liver (eight replicates), brain (eight replicates), and testis (two replicates). The expression levels and stabilities of opossum-shared ORFs are shown as a point of comparison.