NEUROPROTECTIVE MOLECULES AND METHODS OF TREATING NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND INDUCING STRESS GRANULES
20200010832 ยท 2020-01-09
Inventors
Cpc classification
C12N2310/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/11
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/113
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C12N15/113
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/11
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Provided herein are neuroprotective molecules containing a sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA and at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides, where the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides contains a D-loop stem structure, the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides are located at the 5 end of the neuroprotective molecule, and the neuroprotective molecule contains at least one deoxyribonucleotide. Also provided are neuroprotective molecules containing a sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA.sup.CYS; and at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides, where the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides contains a D-loop stem structure and the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides are located at the 5 end of the neuroprotective molecule.
Claims
1. A neuroprotective molecule comprising: a sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides that is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA; and at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides; wherein the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides comprises a D-loop stem structure, the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides are located at the 5 end of the neuroprotective molecule, and the neuroprotective molecule comprises at least one deoxyribonucleotide.
2. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, wherein the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA having a sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOS: 4, 5, 8-11, 13-17, 32, 37, and 40-173.
3. A neuroprotective molecule comprising: a sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides that is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA selected from the group consisting of: tRNA.sup.Arg, tRNA.sup.Asp, tRNA.sup.Glu, tRNA.sup.Gln, tRNA.sup.Gly, tRNA.sup.His, tRNA.sup.Ile, tRNA.sup.Leu, tRNA.sup.Lys, tRNA.sup.Met, tRNA.sup.Pro, tRNA.sup.SeC, tRNA.sup.Ser, tRNA.sup.Sup, tRNA.sup.Thr, tRNA.sup.Trp, tRNA.sup.Tyr, tRNA.sup.Val, tRNA.sup.Asn, and tRNA.sup.Phe; and at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides; wherein the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides comprises a D-loop stem structure and the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides are located at the 5 end of the neuroprotective molecule.
4. A neuroprotective molecule of claim 3, wherein the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA having a sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOS: 5, 8, 9, 11, 14-17, 32, 37, 56, 57, and 63-173.
5. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 4, wherein the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA having a sequence selected from the group of SEQ ID NOS: 11 and 107-116.
6. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, wherein the neuroprotective molecule further comprises a 5-monophosphate.
7. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, wherein the neuroprotective molecule comprises at least one modified nucleotide.
8. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 7, wherein the modified nucleotide contains a modified base or a modified sugar.
9. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, wherein the neuroprotective molecule contains at least one modification in the phosphate backbone.
10. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, wherein the neuroprotective molecule contains a 5- or a 3-protective group.
11. The neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, wherein the neuroprotective molecule has a total length of between 39 to 60 nucleotides.
12. A pharmaceutical composition comprising at least one neuroprotective molecule of claim 1.
13. A method of inducing or increasing stress granule formation in a cell, the method comprising administering to a cell a neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide comprising the sequence of GGGGAGGGTGGGGAGGGT GGGG (SEQ ID NO: 174), wherein the neuroprotective molecule or the isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered in an amount sufficient to induce or increase stress granule formation in the cell.
14. A method of decreasing protein translation in a cell, the method comprising administering to a cell a neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide comprising the sequence of GGGGAGGGTGGGGAGGGTGGGG (SEQ ID NO: 174), where the neuroprotective molecule or the isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered in an amount sufficient to decrease protein translation in the cell.
15. A method of decreasing stress-induced cell death, the method comprising administering to a cell a neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide comprising the sequence of GGGGAGGGTGGGGAGGGTGGGG (SEQ ID NO: 174), where the neuroprotective molecule or the isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered in an amount sufficient to decrease cell death.
16. The method of claim 13, wherein the cell is in vitro.
17. The method of claim 13, wherein the cell is in vivo.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein the cell is a neuron.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the cell is a motor neuron.
20. A method of treating a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject, the method comprising administering a neuroprotective molecule of claim 1, or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide comprising the sequence of GGGGAGGGTGGGGAGGGTGGGG (SEQ ID NO: 174), wherein the neuroprotective molecule or the isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered in an amount sufficient to treat the neurological disorder associated with neuron death in the subject.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the neurological disorder associated with neuron death is selected from the group consisting of: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, and stroke.
22. The method of claim 20, wherein the neuroprotective molecule or the isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered intravenously, intraarterially, intracranially, ocularly, intraperitoneally, subcutaneously, or intramuscularly.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0064] Neuroprotective molecules that are capable of inhibiting protein translation, inducing or increasing stress granule formation in a cell (e.g., a motor neuron), and decreasing stress-induced cell death (e.g., motor neuron death) have been discovered. These neuroprotective molecules are based, in part, on sequences present within mature human tRNAs. Some of these neuroprotective molecules have been shown to be taken up by motor neurons in the absence of transfection agents. The structural features of the neuroprotective molecules are described below, as well as their use in methods of inhibiting protein translation in a cell, inducing or increasing stress granule formation in a cell, reducing stress-induced cell death, and treating a neurological disorder associated with neuron death. Also provided herein are methods of identifying a candidate translation inhibitory nucleic acid.
Compositions
[0065] Provided herein are neuroprotective molecules containing a sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides (e.g., 25-30 nucleotides or 30-35 nucleotides) that is at least 80% identical (e.g., at least 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100% identical) to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 to nucleotide 50 (e.g., between nucleotide 1 to nucleotide 30) of a mature human tRNA (e.g., any of the mature human tRNA sequences described herein or known in the art), and at least four (e.g., five, six, seven, or eight) guanosine-containing nucleotides, where the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides contains a D-loop stem structure, the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides are located at the 5-end of the neuroprotective molecule, and the neuroprotective molecule contains at least one (e.g., two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, or ten) deoxyribonucleotide. In some embodiments, the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence of between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA having a sequence selected from: SEQ ID NOS: 4, 5, 8-11, 13-17, 32, 37, and 40-173.
[0066] Also provided are neuroprotective molecules containing a sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides (e.g., 25-30 nucleotides or 30-35 nucleotides) that is at least 80% identical (e.g., at least 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100% identical) to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 (e.g., between nucleotide 1 to nucleotide 30) of a mature human tRNA selected from the group of: tRNA.sup.Arg, tRNA.sup.Asp, tGlu.sup.Glu, tRNA.sup.Gln, tRNA.sup.Gly, tRNA.sup.His, tRNA.sup.Ile, tRNA.sup.Leu, tRNA.sup.Lys, tRNA.sup.Met, tRNA.sup.Pro, tRNA.sup.SeC, tRNA.sup.Ser, tRNA.sup.Sup, tRNA.sup.Thr, tRNA.sup.Trp, tRNA.sup.Tyr, tRNA.sup.Val, tRNA.sup.Asn, and tRNA.sup.Phe (e.g., any of the sequences described herein or known in the art), and at least four (e.g., five, six, seven, or eight) contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides, where the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides contains a D-loop stem structure and the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides are located at the 5 end of the neuroprotective molecule. In some embodiments, the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA having a sequence selected from the group of SEQ ID NOS: 5, 8, 9, 11, 14-17, 32, 37, 56, 57, and 63-173. In some embodiments, the sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA having a sequence selected from the group of SEQ ID NOS: 11 and 107-116.
[0067] The comparison of sequences and determination of percent identity between two sequences can be accomplished using a mathematical algorithm. The percent identity between two amino acid sequences is determined using the Needleman and Wunsch J. Mol. Biol. 48:444-453, 1970) algorithm, which has been incorporated into the GAP program in the GCG software package (available the at gcg.com), using either a Blossum 62 matrix or a PAM250 matrix, and a gap weight of 16 and a length weight of 1. The percent identity between two nucleotide sequences is determined using the GAP program in the GCG software package (available the Accelrys Inc. website), using a NWSgapdna.CMP matrix and a gap weight of 40 and a length weight of 1. The calculation of percent identity as described herein, recognizes a uracil-containing nucleotide (deoxyuracil and ribouracil) as being the same as a T (deoxythymine or ribothymine).
[0068] In some embodiments, the neuroprotective molecules can contain a sequence of 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, or 35 contiguous nucleotides that is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence present between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA. In some embodiments, the contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA starts at nucleotide number 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 of the mature human tRNA sequence.
[0069] Non-limiting examples of mature human tRNAs are listed below. Any of the human tRNA molecules described herein or known in the art can be used to design the neuroprotective molecules described herein.
[0070] Non-limiting exemplary Ala tRNA sequences are listed below.
Ala tRNA
TABLE-US-00001 (SEQIDNO:40) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcuu (SEQIDNO:41) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcu (SEQIDNO:42) gggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcu (SEQIDNO:43) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugc (SEQIDNO:44) gggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugc (nisa,c,g,oru;SEQIDNO:45) gggggunuagcucagugguagagcgcgugcuu (SEQIDNO:46) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgug (SEQIDNO:47) guguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcuucgc (nisa,c,g,oru;SEQIDNO:48) ggggunuagcucagugguagagcgcgugcuu (nisa,c,g,oru;SEQIDNO:49) ggggggunuagcucagugguagagcgcgugcu (SEQIDNO:50) gggguguagcucagugguagagagcgugcuu (SEQIDNO:51) gggggunuagcucagugguagagcgcgugc (SEQIDNO:52) ggggguguagcucagugguagagagcgugcu (SEQIDNO:53) ggggauguagcucagugguagagcgcaugcu (SEQIDNO:54) gggggauuagcucaaaugguagagcgcucg (SEQIDNO:55) ggggaunuagcucagugguagagcgcaugcu Anon-limitingexemplaryArgtRNAsequenceis (SEQIDNO:56) ggcucuguugcgcaauggauagcgcau and anon-limitingexemplaryAsptRNAsequenceis (SEQIDNO:57) uccucauuaguauaguggugaguauccc. Non-limitingexemplaryCystRNAsequencesare listedbelow. CystRNA (SEQIDNO:58) ggggguauagcucagugguagagcauuuga (SEQIDNO:59) ggggguauagcucagugguagagcauuug (SEQIDNO:60) ggggguauagcucagugguagagcauuu (SEQIDNO:61) ggggguauagcucaguggguagagcau (SEQIDNO:62) ggggguguaacucagugguagagcauuuga Anon-limitingexemplaryGlntRNAsequenceis (SEQIDNO:63) gguuccaugguguaaugguuagcacucug. Non-limitingexemplaryGlytRNAsequencesare listedbelow. GlytRNA (SEQIDNO:64) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccugcc (SEQIDNO:65) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccugc (SEQIDNO:66) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccug (SEQIDNO:67) uggugguucagugguagaauucucgccug (SEQIDNO:68) auuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccug (SEQIDNO:69) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccu (SEQIDNO:70) ggcauuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:71) auuggugguucagugguagaauucucgcc (SEQIDNO:72) agcauuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:73) cauuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:74) gggaggcccggguucguuucccggccaaugca (SEQIDNO:75) gcauuggugguucagugguagaauucucac (SEQIDNO:76) cgggaggcccggguucgguucccggccaaugc (SEQIDNO:77) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:78) gacauuggugguucagugguagaauucu (SEQIDNO:79) ugguucagugguagaauucucgccucc (SEQIDNO:80) gcauugguauagugguaucaugcaaga (SEQIDNO:81) agcguuggugguauaguggugagcauagcugc Non-limitingexamplesofHistRNAsequencesare listedbelow. HistRNA (SEQIDNO:82) ggccgugaucguauagugguuaguacucug (SEQIDNO:83) ucgccgugaucguauagugguuaguacucug (SEQIDNO:84) ggccgugaucguauagugguuaguacuc (SEQIDNO:85) aggccgugaucguauagugguuaguacuc (SEQIDNO:86) ggccgugaucguauagugguuaguacu (SEQIDNO:87) ggccgugaucguauagugguuaguac Non-limitingexamplesofIletRNAsequencesare listedbelow. IletRNA (SEQIDNO:88) ggccgguuagcucaguugguuagagc (SEQIDNO:89) ggccgguuagcucaguuggucagagc (SEQIDNO:90) ggccgguuagcucaguugguaagagcuuggu (SEQIDNO:91) ggggcggccgguuagcucaguugguaagagc (SEQIDNO:92) ggccgguuagcucaguugguaagagc Non-limitingexamplesofLeutRNAsequencesare listedbelow. LeutRNA (SEQIDNO:93) gguaguguggccgagcggucuaaggc (SEQIDNO:94) guagucguggccgagugguuaaggcuaugga (SEQIDNO:95) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuauggau (SEQIDNO:96) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuauggac (SEQIDNO:97) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuaugga (SEQIDNO:98) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuaugg (SEQIDNO:99) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcaaugga (SEQIDNO:100) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcaaugg (SEQIDNO:101) uguagucguggccgagugguuaaggc Non-limitingexamplesofLystRNAsequencesare listedbelow. LystRNA (SEQIDNO:102) gccuggauagcucaguugguagagcaucaga (SEQIDNO:103) gccuggauagcucaguugguagagcauca (SEQIDNO:104) gccuggguagcucagucgguagagcaucagac (SEQIDNO:105) gccuggguagcucagucgguagagcaucaga (SEQIDNO:106) gccuggguagcucagucgguagagcaucag Non-limitingexamplesofMettRNAsequencesare listedbelow. MettRNA (SEQIDNO:107) gcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugggccc (SEQIDNO:108) ggcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugggcc (SEQIDNO:109) gcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugg (SEQIDNO:110) ugcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugg (SEQIDNO:111) gcaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugggcc (SEQIDNO:112) gcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcug (SEQIDNO:113) cgcagagucgcgcagcggaagcgugcugggcc (SEQIDNO:114) cagagucgcgcagcggaagcgugcugggccc (SEQIDNO:115) agaguugcgcagcggaagcgugcugggccca (SEQIDNO:116) gagauagcagaguggcgcagcggaagc Non-limitingexamplesofProtRNAsequencesare (SEQIDNO:117) ggcucguuggucuagggguaugauucucgg and (SEQIDNO:118) aggcucguuggucuagugguaugauucucg. Anon-limitingexampleofaSeC(selenocysteine) tRNAsequenceis (SEQIDNO:119) gcccggaugauccucaguggucuggggugc. Non-limitingexamplesofSertRNAsequencesare listedbelow. SertRNA (SEQIDNO:120) uguagucguggccgagugguuaaggc (SEQIDNO:121) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuauggac (SEQIDNO:122) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuauggau (SEQIDNO:123) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuaugga (SEQIDNO:124) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcaaugga (SEQIDNO:125) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcuaugg (SEQIDNO:126) gacgagguggccgagugguuaaggcaaugg Non-limitingexamplesofSup(suppressor)tRNA sequencesare (SEQIDNO:127) gccuggauagcucaguugguagagcaucaga and (SEQIDNO:128) gccuggauagcucaguugguagagcauca. Non-limitingexamplesofThrtRNAsequencesare listedbelow. ThrtRNA (SEQIDNO:129) ggcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugggcc (SEQIDNO:130) gcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugggccc (SEQIDNO:131) gcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugg (SEQIDNO:132) cggaagcgugcugggcccauaacccaga (SEQIDNO:133) ugcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugg (SEQIDNO:134) gcaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcugggcc (SEQIDNO:135) gcagaguggcgcagcggaagcgugcug (SEQIDNO:136) cgcagagucgcgcagcggaagcgugcugggcc (SEQIDNO:137) cagagucgcgcagcggaagcgugcugggccc (SEQIDNO:138) agaguugcgcagcggaagcgugcugggccca Non-limitingexamplesofTyrtRNAsequences include (SEQIDNO:139) gccuggauagcucaguugguagagcaucaga and (SEQIDNO:140) gccuggauagcucaguugguagagcauca. Non-limitingexamplesofValtRNAsequencesare listedbelow. ValtRNA (SEQIDNO:141) uuccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgccuc (SEQIDNO:142) uuccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgcc (SEQIDNO:143) uccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgccuga (SEQIDNO:144) uccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgccug (SEQIDNO:145) uccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgccuca (SEQIDNO:146) uccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgccu (SEQIDNO:147) guuuccguaguguaguggucaucacguucgcc (SEQIDNO:148) ccguaguguagugguuaucacguucgcc (SEQIDNO:149) guuuccguaguguaguggucaucacguucg (SEQIDNO:150) cguaguguagugguuaucacguucgcc (SEQIDNO:151) uccguaguguagugguuaucacuuucgccu (SEQIDNO:152) uccguaguguacugguuaucacguucgccug (SEQIDNO:153) cguaguguaguggucaucacguucgccu (SEQIDNO:154) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcuu (SEQIDNO:155) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcu (SEQIDNO:156) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugc (SEQIDNO:157) ggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgug (SEQIDNO:158) gggggguguagcucagugguagagcgcgugcu (SEQIDNO:159) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccugcc (SEQIDNO:160) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccugc (SEQIDNO:161) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccug (SEQIDNO:162) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccu (SEQIDNO:163) uggugguucagugguagaauucucgccug (SEQIDNO:164) auuggugguucagugguagaauucucgccug (SEQIDNO:165) auuggugguucagugguagaauucucgcc (SEQIDNO:166) ggcauuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:167) uuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:168) ugguucagugguagaauucucgccucc (SEQIDNO:169) cauuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:170) agcauuggugguucagugguagaauucucgc (SEQIDNO:171) gcauuggugguucagugguagaauucucac
[0071] A non-limiting example of a Asn tRNA sequence is gtctctgtgg cgcaatcggt tagcgcgttc ggctgttaac (SEQ ID NO: 172). A non-limiting example of a Phe tRNA sequence is gccgaaatag ctcagttggg agagcgttag actgaagatc (SEQ ID NO: 173). Additional non-limiting examples of human mature tRNA sequences that can be used to generate any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein are listed in the Sequence Appendix and are described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20110046209 (herein incorporated by reference). Additional examples of human mature tRNA sequences that can be used to generate any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein are known in the art (see, NCBI website, the UCSC genomic tRNA database website (address: gtrnadb.ucsc.edu), and the Unversitat Leipzig tRNAdb website (address:trandb.bioinf.uni-leipzig.edu).
[0072] The sequence of 25-35 contiguous nucleotides that is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence present between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA incorporated in the neuroprotective molecules described herein should be sufficient to allow the formation of a D-stem loop structure in the neuroprotective molecule. The D-stem loop structure of mature human tRNAs is typically comprised of a region extending from about nucleotide 6 to about nucleotide 27. The formation of a D-loop stem structure within the neuroprotective molecules described herein can be assessed by its gel migration (e.g., in the presence or absence of denaturing agents) or by circular dichroism. Additional methods for the detection of the D-loop stem structure within a nucleic acid are known in the art.
[0073] In some embodiments, the guanosine-containing nucleotide can contain a ribose. In some embodiments, the guanosine-containing nucleotide can contain a deoxyribose. In some embodiments, the guanosine-containing nucleotide can contain a modified sugar (e.g., any of the modified sugars described herein). In some embodiments, the guanosine-containing nucleotide can contain modified guanosine (e.g., 7-methyl guanosine or 6-thioguanosine). In preferred embodiments, the at least four contiguous guanosine-containing nucleotides form a G-quadraplex (e.g., a G-quadraplex with guanosines within the neuroprotective molecule).
[0074] The neuroprotective molecules described herein can contain one or more (e.g., two, three, four, of five) modified nucleotides. The modified nucleotides can contain a modified base or a modified sugar. Non-limiting examples of modified bases include: xanthine, diaminopurine, 8-oxo-N.sup.6-methyladenine, 7-deazaxanthine, 7-deazaguanine, N.sup.4, N.sup.4-ethanocytosin, N.sup.6, N.sup.6-ethano-2,6-diaminopurine, 5-methylcytosine, 5-(C.sup.3-C.sup.6)-alkynyl-cytosine, 5-fluorouracil, 5-bromouracil, pseudoisocytosine, 2-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-triazolopyridin, isocytosine, isoguanine, and inosine. Additional non-limiting examples of modified bases include those nucleobases described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,432,272 and 3,687,808 (herein incorporated by reference), Freier et al., Nucleic Acid Res. 25:4429-4443, 1997; Sanghvi, Antisense Research and Application, Chapter 15, Ed. S. T. Crooke and B. Lebleu, CRC Press, 1993; Englisch, et al., Angewandte Chemie 30:613-722, 1991, Kroschwitz, Concise Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Engineering, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 858-859, 1990; and Cook, Anti-Cancer Drug Design 6:585-607, 1991. Additional non-limiting examples of modified bases include universal bases (e.g., 3-nitropyrole and 5-nitroindole). Other modified bases include pyrene and pyridyloxazole derivatives, pyrenyl, pyrenylmethylglycerol derivatives, and the like. Other preferred universal bases include pyrrole, diazole, or triazole derivatives, including those universal bases known in the art.
[0075] In some embodiments, the modified nucleotide can contain a modification in its sugar moiety. A non-limiting examples of modified nucleotides that contains a modified sugar are locked nucleic acids (LNAs). LNA monomers are described in WO 99/14226 and U.S. Patent Application Publications Nos. 20110076675, 20100286044, 20100279895, 20100267018, 20100261175, 20100035968, 20090286753, 20090023594, 20080096191, 20030092905, 20020128381, and 20020115080 (herein incorporated by reference). Additional non-limiting examples of LNAs are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,043,060, 6,268,490, WO 01/07455, WO 01/00641, WO 98/39352, WO 00/56746, WO 00/56748, and WO 00/66604 (herein incorporated by reference), as well as in Morita et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 12(1):73-76, 2002; Hakansson et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 11(7):935-938, 2001; Koshkin et al., J. Org. Chem. 66(25):8504-8512, 2001; Kvaerno et al., J. Org. Chem. 66(16):5498-5503, 2001; Hakansson et al., J. Org. Chem. 65(17):5161-5166, 2000; Kvaerno et al., J. Org. Chem. 65(17):5167-5176, 2000; Pfundheller et al., Nucleosides Nucleotides 18(9):2017-2030, 1999; and Kumar et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 8(16):2219-2222, 1998. In some embodiments, the modified nucleotide is an oxy-LNA monomer, such as those described in WO 03/020739.
[0076] The neuroprotective molecules described herein can also contain a modification in the phosphodiester backbone. For example, at least one linkage between any two contiguous (adjoining) nucleotides in the neuroprotective molecule can be connected by a moiety containing 2 to 4 groups/atoms selected from the group of: CH.sub.2, O, S, NR.sup.H, >CO, >CNR.sup.H, >CS, Si(R).sub.2, SO, S(O).sub.2, P(O).sub.2, PO(BH.sub.3), P(O,S), P(S).sub.2, PO(R), PO(OCH.sub.3), and PO(NHR.sup.H), where R.sup.H is selected from hydrogen and C.sub.1-4-alkyl, and R is selected from C.sub.1-6-alkyl and phenyl. Illustrative examples of such linkages are CH.sub.2CH.sub.2CH.sub.2, CH.sub.2COCH.sub.2, CH.sub.2CHOHCH.sub.2, OCH.sub.2O, OCH.sub.2CH.sub.2, OCH.sub.2CH (including R.sup.5 when used as a linkage to a succeeding monomer), CH.sub.2CH.sub.2O, NR.sup.HCH.sub.2CH.sub.2, CH.sub.2CH.sub.2NR.sup.H, CH.sub.2NR.sup.HCH.sub.2, OCH.sub.2CH.sub.2NR.sup.H, NR.sup.HCOO, NR.sup.HCONR.sup.H, NR.sup.HCSNR.sup.H, NR.sup.HC(NR.sup.H)NR.sup.H, NR.sup.HCOCH.sub.2NR.sup.H, OCOO, OCOCH.sub.2O, OCH.sub.2COO, CH.sub.2CONR.sup.H, OCONR.sup.H, NR.sup.HCOCH.sub.2, OCH.sub.2CONR.sup.H, OCH.sub.2CH.sub.2NR.sup.H, CHNO, CH.sub.2NR.sup.HO, CH.sub.2ON (including R.sup.5 when used as a linkage to a succeeding monomer), CH.sub.2ONR.sup.H, CONR.sup.HCH.sub.2, CH.sub.2NR.sup.HO, CH.sub.2NR.sup.HCO, ONR.sup.HCH.sub.2, ONR.sup.H, OCH.sub.2S, SCH.sub.2O, CH.sub.2CH.sub.2S, OCH.sub.2CH.sub.2S, SCH.sub.2CH (including R.sup.5 when used as a linkage to a succeeding monomer), SCH.sub.2CH.sub.2, SCH.sub.2CH.sub.2O, SCH.sub.2CH.sub.2S, CH.sub.2SCH.sub.2, CH.sub.2SOCH.sub.2, CH.sub.2SO.sub.2CH.sub.2, OSOO, OS(O).sub.2O, OS(O).sub.2CH.sub.2, OS(O).sub.2NR.sup.H, NR.sub.HS(O).sub.2CH.sub.2, OS(O).sub.2CH.sub.2, OP(O).sub.2O, OP(O,S)O, OP(S).sub.2O, SP(O).sub.2O, SP(O,S)O, SP(S).sub.2O, OP(O,S)S, OP(S).sub.2S, SP(O).sub.2S, SP(O,S)S, SP(S).sub.2S, OPO(R)O, OPO(OCH.sub.3)O, OPO(OCH.sub.2CH.sub.3)O, OPO(OCH.sub.2SR)O, OPO(BH.sub.3)O, OPO(NHR.sup.N)O, OP(O).sub.2NR.sup.H, NR.sup.HP(O).sub.2O, OP(O,NR.sup.H).sub.2O, CH.sub.2P(O).sub.2O, OP(O).sub.2CH.sub.2, and OSi(R).sub.2O; among which CH.sub.2CONR.sup.H, CH.sub.2NR.sup.HO, SCH.sub.2O, OP(O).sub.2O, OP(O,S)O, OP(S).sub.2O, NR.sup.HP(O).sub.2O, OP(O,NR.sup.H)O, OPO(R)O, OPO(CH.sub.3)O, and OPO(NHR.sup.N)O, where R.sup.H is selected form hydrogen and C.sub.1-4-alkyl, and R is selected from C.sub.1-6-alkyl and phenyl. Further illustrative examples are given in Mesmaeker et. al., Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 5:343-355, 1995; and Freier et al., Nucleic Acids Research 25:4429-43, 1997. The left-hand side of the inter-nucleoside linkage is bound to the 5-membered ring as substituent P* at the 3-position, whereas the right-hand side is bound to the 5-position of a preceding monomer.
[0077] In some embodiments, any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein can be modified at either the 3 and/or 5 end by any type of modification known in the art. For example, either or both ends may be capped with a protecting group, attached to a flexible linking group, attached to a reactive group to aid in attachment to the substrate surface. Non-limiting examples of 3 and/or 5 blocking groups include: 2-amino-2-oxyethyl, 2-aminobenzoyl, 4-aminobenzoyl, acetyl, acetyloxy, (acetylamino)methyl, 3-(9-acridinyl), tricyclo[3.3.1.1(3,7)]dec-1-yloxy, 2-aminoethyl, propenyl, (9-anthracenylmethoxy)carbonyl, (1,1-dmimethylpropoxy)carbonyl, (1,1-dimethylpropoxy)carbonyl, [1-methyl-1-[4-(phenylazo)phenyl]ethoxy]carbonyl, bromoacetyl, (benzoylamino)methyl, (2-bromoethoxy)carbonyl, (diphenylmethoxy)carbonyl, 1-methyl-3-oxo-3-phenyl-1-propenyl, (3-bromo-2-nitrophenyl)thio, (1,1-dimethylethoxy)carbonyl, [[(1,1-dimethylethoxy)carbonyl]amino]ethyl, 2-(phenylmethoxy)phenoxy, (1=[1,1-biphenyl]-4-yl-1-methylethoxy) carbonyl, bromo, (4-bromophenyl)sulfonyl, 1H-benzotriazol-1-yl, [(phenylmethyl)thio]carbonyl, [(phenylmetyl)thio]methyl, 2-methylpropyl, 1,1-dimethylethyl, benzoyl, diphenylmethyl, phenylmethyl, carboxyacetyl, aminocarbonyl, chlorodifluoroacetyl, trifluoromethyl, cyclohexylcarbonyl, cycloheptyl, cyclohexyl, cyclohexylacetyl, chloro, carboxymethyl, cyclopentylcarbonyl, cyclopentyl, cyclopropylmethyl, ethoxycarbonyl, ethyl, fluoro, formyl, 1-oxohexyl, iodo, methyl, 2-methoxy-2-oxoethyl, nitro, azido, phenyl, 2-carboxybenzoyl, 4-pyridinylmethyl, 2-piperidinyl, propyl, 1-methylethyl, sulfo, and ethenyl. Additional examples of 5 and 3 blocking groups are known in the art. In some embodiments, the 5 and/or 3 blocking groups prevent nuclease degradation of the neuroprotective molecule.
[0078] The neurorprotective molecules described herein can be synthesized using any methods known in the art for synthesizing nucleic acids (see, e.g., Usman et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 109:7845, 1987; Scaringe et al., Nucleic Acid Res. 18:5433, 1990; Wincott et al., Methods Mol. Biol. 74:59, 1997; and Milligan, Nucleic Acid Res. 21:8783, 1987). These typically make use of common nucleic acid protecting and coupling groups. Synthesis can be performed on commercial equipment designed for this purpose, e.g., a 394 Applied Biosystems, Inc synthesizer, using protocols supplied by the manufacturer. Additional methods for synthesizing the neuroprotective molecules described herein are known in the art. Alternatively, neuroprotective molecules of the invention can be specially ordered from commercial vendors that synthesize oligonucleotides.
[0079] Any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein can be tested for activity (e.g., ability to inhibit or decrease protein translation, the ability to induce or increase stress granule formation in a cell, the ability to translocate into a cell in the absence of cell transfection reagents, the ability to treat a neurological disorder associated with neuron death, or the ability to confer upon cells (e.g., neurons) resistance to stress-induced cell death). Methods for detecting or assessing protein translation (e.g., the amount of translation over a specific period of time or rate of protein translation), methods for detecting or assessing the formation of at least one stress granule in a cell, methods of detecting or assessing the cellular uptake, methods of determining treatment of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject, and methods of determining whether a neuroprotective molecule confers protection against stress-induced cell death are described herein. Additional methods for assessing these activities are known in the art.
Pharmaceutical Compositions
[0080] Also provided herein are pharmaceutical compositions that contain at least one (e.g., one, two, three, or four) of the neuroprotective molecules (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein) or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein. Two or more (e.g., two, three, or four) of any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein can be present in a pharmaceutical composition in any combination. The pharmaceutical compositions may be formulated in any manner known in the art.
[0081] Pharmaceutical compositions are formulated to be compatible with their intended route of administration (e.g., intravenous, intracranial, ocular, intraarterial, intramuscular, intradermal, subcutaneous, or intraperitoneal). The compositions can include a sterile diluent (e.g., sterile water or saline), a fixed oil, polyethylene glycol, glycerine, propylene glycol or other synthetic solvents, antibacterial or antifungal agents such as benzyl alcohol or methyl parabens, chlorobutanol, phenol, ascorbic acid, thimerosal, and the like, antioxidants such as ascorbic acid or sodium bisulfite, chelating agents such as ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, buffers such as acetates, citrates, or phosphates, and isotonic agents such as sugars (e.g., dextrose), polyalcohols (e.g., manitol or sorbitol), or salts (e.g., sodium chloride), or any combination thereof. Liposomal suspensions can also be used as pharmaceutically acceptable carriers (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,522,811). Preparations of the compositions can be formulated and enclosed in ampules, disposable syringes, or multiple dose vials. Where required (as in, for example, injectable formulations), proper fluidity can be maintained by, for example, the use of a coating such as lecithin, or a surfactant. Absorption of the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be prolonged by including an agent that delays absorption (e.g., aluminum monostearate and gelatin). Alternatively, controlled release can be achieved by implants and microencapsulated delivery systems, which can include biodegradable, biocompatible polymers (e.g., ethylene vinyl acetate, polyanhydrides, polyglycolic acid, collagen, polyorthoesters, and polylactic acid; Alza Corporation and Nova Pharmaceutical, Inc.).
[0082] Compositions containing one or more of any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein can be formulated for parenteral (e.g., intravenous, intraarterial, intramuscular, intradermal, subcutaneous, or intraperitoneal), intracranial, or ocular administration in dosage unit form (i.e., physically discrete units containing a predetermined quantity of active compound for ease of administration and uniformity of dosage).
[0083] Toxicity and therapeutic efficacy of compositions can be determined by standard pharmaceutical procedures in cell cultures or experimental animals (e.g., monkeys). One can, for example, determine the LD50 (the dose lethal to 50% of the population) and the ED50 (the dose therapeutically effective in 50% of the population): the therapeutic index being the ratio of LD50:ED50. Agents that exhibit high therapeutic indices are preferred. Where an agent exhibits an undesirable side effect, care should be taken to minimize potential damage (i.e., reduce unwanted side effects). Toxicity and therapeutic efficacy can be determined by other standard pharmaceutical procedures.
[0084] Data obtained from cell culture assays and animal studies can be used in formulating an appropriate dosage of any given agent for use in a subject (e.g., a human). A therapeutically effective amount of the one or more (e.g., one, two, three, or four) neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein) will be an amount that treats a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) in a subject (e.g., a human), decreases the severity, frequency, and/or duration of one or more symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) in a subject (e.g., a human), decreases the rate of neuron death (apoptosis and/or necrosis) in a subject (e.g., a human) having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death, induces or increases stress granule formation in a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron) in a subject having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), and/or decreases or inhibits protein translation in a neuron (e.g, a motor neuron) in a subject (e.g., a human) having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., as compared to a control subject having the same disease but not receiving treatment or a different treatment, or the same subject prior to treatment). The effectiveness and dosing of any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein can be determined by a health care professional using methods known in the art, as well as by the observation of one or more symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject (e.g., a human). Certain factors may influence the dosage and timing required to effectively treat a subject (e.g., the severity of the disease or disorder, previous treatments, the general health and/or age of the subject, and the presence of other diseases).
[0085] Exemplary doses include milligram or microgram amounts of any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein per kilogram of the subject's weight (e.g., about 100 ng/kg to about 500 mg/kg; 500 ng/kg to about 1 g/kg; 1 g/kg to about 500 mg/kg; about 100 g/kg to about 500 mg/kg; about 100 g/kg to about 50 mg/kg; about 10 g/kg to about 5 mg/kg; about 10 g/kg to about 0.5 mg/kg; or about 1 g/kg to about 50 g/kg). While these doses cover a broad range, one of ordinary skill in the art will understand that therapeutic agents, including the neuroprotective molecules and the C-myc oligonucleotides, vary in their potency, and effective amounts can be determined by methods known in the art. Typically, relatively low doses are administered at first, and the attending health care professional (in the case of therapeutic application) or a researcher (when still working at the development stage) can subsequently and gradually increase the dose until an appropriate response is obtained. In addition, it is understood that the specific dose level for any particular subject will depend upon a variety of factors including the activity of the specific compound employed, the age, body weight, general health, gender, and diet of the subject, the time of administration, the route of administration, the rate of excretion, and the half-life of the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide in vivo.
[0086] The pharmaceutical compositions can be included in a container, pack, or dispenser together with instructions for administration.
Methods of Inducing/Increasing Stress Granule Formation in a Cell
[0087] Provided herein are methods of inducing or increasing stress granule formation in a cell that include administering to a cell a neuroprotective molecule (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein) or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide containing the sequence of GGGAGGGTGG GGAGGGTGGGG (SEQ ID NO: 174) (e.g., any of the C-myc oligonucleotides described herein), wherein the neuroprotective molecule or isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered in an amount sufficient to induce or increase (e.g., a significant or detectable increase) stress granule formation in the cell. In some embodiments, the increase in stress granule formation is the formation of at least one stress granule in a cell that does not contain stress granules prior to treatment.
[0088] Stress granules are formed in the cytosol and nucleus of mammalian cells (e.g., neurons) in response to stress stimuli (e.g., oxidative stress). Stress granules contain both proteins and messenger RNAs (e.g., polyA mRNAs) that are stalled in translation pre-initiation complexes. Stress granules range between 100 nm to 200 nm in size and are not surrounded by a cellular membrane. A variety of proteins have been identified as being present within stress granules and the presence of stress granules can be identified by the localization of one or more (e.g., two, three, or four) of the following proteins/complexes in distinct foci within a cell (e.g., within the cytoplasm or nucleus of a cell): 40S ribosomal subunit, Ago2, AKAP350, APOBEC3G, Ataxin-2/Pbp1, BRF1, Calreticulin, Caprin1, CCAR1, Ccr4, CIRP, CPEB, CUG-BP1, Dcp1/Dcp1a, Dcp2; DDX1, DDX3/Ded1, DIC1/DHC1, DIS1, Eap1, Ebs1, Edc1-2, Edc3, eIF2, eIF2B, eIF3, eIF4A, eIF4E, eIF4E-T, eIF4G, eRF1, eRF3, FAK, FAST, FBP/KSRP, FMRP, FXR1P, FXR2P, G3BP, Gbp2, Ge-1/Hed1s, Grb7, GW182, hMex3A, hMex3B, hnRNP A1, hnRNP A3, hnRNP K, hnRNP Q, Hrp1, Htt, Hsp27, HuD, HuR, IP5K, Importin-8, KHC/KLC, Lin28, LINE1 ORF1p, Lsm1, MBNL1, MEX67, MLN51, Musahi, Nrp1, NXF7, p97/NAT1, PABP/Pab1, Pan2/3, Pat1, PCBP2, Plakophilin 1/3, PMR1, Pop2/Caf1, Prohibitin 2, PRTB, Pum1, Pum2, RACK1, RBM42, Rap55/Sed6, RCK/Dhh1, RHAU, Roquin, Rpm2, RSK2, Sam68, SERBP1, SGNP, Smaug 1, Staufen, SMN, TDP-43, TDRD3, TIA-1/Pub1, TIA-R/Ngr1, TNRC6B, TRAF2, TTP, Upf1, Upf2, Upf3, Vts1, Xm1, YB-1, Ygr250c, and ZBP1. Typically, the presence of stress granules in a cell are detected using microscopy (e.g., immunofluorescence microscopy) using one or more antibodies that recognize the localization one or more of the following proteins in discrete foci in the cell: 40S ribosomal subunit, eIF4E, eIF4G, eIF4A, eIF4B, poly(A) binding protein (Pabp), eIF3, and eIF2. The presence of a stress granule can also be detected by assessment of the level of phosphorylated eIF2 present in the cell (e.g., an increased level of phospho-eIF2 indicates the presence of stress granules in the cell). Additional methods for detecting the formation or presence of stress granules in the cell are known in the art.
[0089] The formation of stress granule formation in a cell can be compared to the same cell prior to treatment or can be compared to at least one second cell or a population of cells not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment. In some embodiments, the cell is treated with the at least one neuroprotective molecule or the C-myc oligonucleotide for at least 2 hours (e.g., at least 6 hours, 12 hours, 16 hours, 20 hours, or 24 hours) before the formation of stress granules is determined in the cell.
[0090] An increase in stress granule formation in a cell (e.g., a motor neuron) can be indirectly observed in a subject having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., stress-induced motor neuron death) by a decrease (e.g., a detectable decrease) in the rate of the development of at least one symptom of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death or a decrease in the rate of the worsening or exacerbation of at least one symptom (e.g., an increase in the intensity, duration, or frequency of at least one symptom over time) of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject.
[0091] In some embodiments, a C-myc oligonucleotide containing the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 174 is administered to the cell. The C-myc oligonucleotides that can be used in these methods can include at least one modified nucleotide (e.g., any of the modified oligonucleotides described herein). In addition, the C-myc oligonucleotides can contain at least one modification in the phosphate backbone (the phosphodiester linkage between two adjoining nucleotides) (e.g., any of linkages described herein). The C-myc oligonucleotides described herein can also include a 5 and/or a 3 blocking group (e.g., a 5 and/or 3 blocking group that decreases or inhibits nuclease degradation) (e.g., any of the 5 and/or 3 blocking groups described herein or known in the art). In some embodiments, the C-myc oligonucleotides have a total length of between 21 to 50 nucleotides (e.g., 21-30 nucleotides, 30-40 nucleotides, or 40-50 nucleotides).
[0092] In various embodiments of these methods, the cell can be a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron), a fibroblast, an epithelial cell, an endothelial cell, or a muscle cell. In any of the methods described herein, the cell is a human cell. In some embodiments of these methods, the cell is in vitro (in tissue culture). In some embodiments of these methods, the cell is in vivo (in a human). In some embodiments, the cell is ex vivo (e.g., a primary human neuron or a primary rat neuron).
[0093] The neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be administered to the cell by a laboratory worker (a research scientist), a health care professional (e.g., a physician, a physician's assistant, or a nurse), or a subject (e.g., self-administration). In instances where the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide are administered to a to a cell in vivo (in a subject), the dosing and administration of the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be performed as described below.
Methods of Decreasing Protein Translation in a Cell
[0094] The data in the Examples show that the neuroprotective molecules and the C-myc oligonucleotides described herein inhibit protein translation of mRNA (capped and uncapped mRNAs) by displacing eIF4G/eIF4A from uncapped RNAs and by displacing eIF4F from the m.sup.7G cap of mRNAs. Accordingly, provided herein are methods of decreasing protein translation in a cell that include administering to a cell a neuroprotective molecule (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein) or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide (e.g., any of the C-myc oligonucleotides described herein), where the neuroprotective molecule or the isolated C-myc oligonucleotide is administered in an amount sufficient to decrease (e.g., a significant or detectable decrease) protein translation in the cell.
[0095] In some embodiments, the decrease in protein translation is detected by the amount of protein translation (new proteins translated) over a specific period of time (e.g., at least 1 hour, 2 hours, 4 hours, or 6 hours). In some embodiments, the decrease is protein translation is a decrease in the rate of protein translation in the cell (e.g., as measured by radioisotope labeling (.sup.35S) of newly translated proteins or by detection of the biological activity of a newly expressed protein). The decrease in protein translation in a cell can be compared to a control cell or population of cells not receiving the treatment or receiving a different treatment. Additional methods for detecting protein translation are described herein and are known in the art.
[0096] An decrease in protein translation in a cell (e.g., a motor neuron) can be indirectly observed in a subject having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., stress-induced motor neuron death) by a decrease (e.g., a detectable decrease) in the rate of the development of at least one symptom of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death or a decrease in the rate of the worsening or exacerbation of at least one symptom (e.g., an increase in the intensity, duration, or frequency of at least one symptom over time) of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject.
[0097] In various embodiments of these methods, the cell can be a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron), a fibroblast, an epithelial cell, an endothelial cell, or a muscle cell. In any of the methods described herein, the cell is a human cell. In some embodiments of these methods, the cell is in vitro (in tissue culture). In some embodiments of these methods, the cell is in vivo (in a human). In some embodiments the cell is ex vivo (e.g., a primary human neuron or a primary rat neuron).
[0098] The neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be administered to the cell by a laboratory worker (a research scientist), a health care professional (e.g., a physician, a physician's assistant, or a nurse), or a subject (e.g., self-administration). In instances where the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide are administered to a cell in vivo (administered to a subject), the dosing and administration of the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be performed as described below.
Methods of Treating Neurological Disorders Associated with Neuron Death
[0099] Also provided herein are methods of treating neurological disorders associated with neuron death (apoptosis and/or necrosis, or stress-induced neuron death). These methods include administering a neuroprotective molecule (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules described herein) or an isolated C-myc oligonucleotide (e.g., any of the C-myc oligonucleotides described herein), where the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide are administered in an amount sufficient to treat the neurological disorder associated with neuron death in the subject.
[0100] Neurological disorders associated with neuron death are a group of diseases that are characterized by neuron death (e.g., motor neuron death or stress-induced motor neuron death) and/or have an etiology that involves neuron death (e.g., motor neuron death or stress-induced motor neuron death). Non-limiting examples of neurological disorders associated with neuron death include amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, and stroke. Neuronal death in this group of disorders can be induced by a variety of stress stimuli, including, for example, oxidative stress, excitotoxicity, and neuroinflammation. The data in the Examples herein show that induction of stress granules (e.g., by administration of any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein) mediates an increase in resistance to stress-induced neuronal death. Thus, by virtue of their ability to induce an increase in stress granule formation in neurons (e.g., motor neurons) in a subject, administration of the neuroprotective molecules and the C-myc oligonucleotides described herein can treat a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject. Some of the neuroprotective molecules and C-myc oligonucleotides described herein have the further advantage that they are taken up by neurons (e.g., motor neurons) without the addition of a transfection agent.
[0101] Non-limiting symptoms of neurological disorders associated with neuron death include: hyperflexia, weak muscles, twitching, speech problems, breathing problems, swallowing difficulties, loss of memory, confusion, disorientation, difficulty writing, depression, anxiety, social withdrawal, mood swings, aggressiveness, changes in sleeping habits, tremors, bradykinesia, rigid muscles, impaired balance, involuntary facial movements, numbness or weakness in limbs, partial or complete loss of vision, fatigue, dizziness, paralysis on one side of body or face, and headache. A neurological disorder associated with neuronal death can be diagnosed by a health care professional by detecting or observing one or more (e.g., two, three, or four) symptoms (any of the above listed symptoms) in a subject.
[0102] In some embodiments, the administering results in a decrease in the number of symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., as compared to the number of symptoms in a subject prior to treatment or to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment). In some embodiments, the administering results in a decrease (e.g., a detectable or observable decrease) in the severity, frequency, or duration of one or more symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., those symptoms listed herein) (e.g., as compared to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment).
[0103] In some embodiments, the administering results in a decrease (e.g., a detectable or observable decrease) in the rate of the development of one or more new symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., as compared to the rate of the development of one or more new symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment). In some embodiments, the administering results in a decrease (e.g., a detectable or observable decrease) in the rate of worsening or exacerbation of one or more symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., an increase in the severity, frequency, or duration of one or more symptoms of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death over time) (e.g., any of those symptoms described herein) (e.g., as compared to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment).
[0104] In some embodiments, the administering results in an increase in stress granule formation in a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron) in a subject that has a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., as compared to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment). In some embodiments, the administering results in a decrease or inhibition in protein translation in a cell (e.g., a motor neuron) in a subject that has a neurological disorder associated with neuron death (e.g., as compared to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment). In some embodiments, the administering results in a decrease in neuron death or a decrease in the rate of neuron death (e.g., stress-induced motor neuron death) over a period of time (e.g., at least one month, at least one year, or at least five years) (e.g., as compared to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment). A decrease in protein translation in a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron), an increase in stress granule in a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron), or a decrease in the amount or rate of neuron death over time can be indirectly observed by a physician by a decrease (e.g., a detectable or observable decrease) in the rate of the development of at least one new symptom of a neurological disorder associated with neuron death in a subject (e.g., a decrease in further development of at least one additional symptom of the disorder) or a decrease in the rate of exacerbation of at least one symptom (e.g., a decreased rate of increasing frequency, severity, and/or duration of at least one symptom of the neurological disorder associated with neuron death) (e.g., as compared to a subject having the same neurological disorder and not receiving treatment or receiving a different treatment).
[0105] Any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein can be used in these methods. In preferred embodiments, the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide is taken up by a neuron in the subject in the absence of a transfection agent. In some embodiments, the neuroprotective molecule or the C-myc oligonucleotide contains a modified nucleotide (e.g., any of the modified bases and/or sugars described herein). In some embodiments, the neuroprotective molecule or the C-myc oligonucleotide contains at least one modification in its phosphate (phosphodiester) backbone (e.g., any of the moieties described herein that can be used to link two adjoining nucleotides).
[0106] The neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be administered by a health care professional (e.g., a physician, a physician's assistant, a nurse, or a laboratory or clinic worker), the subject (i.e., self-administration), or a friend or family member of the subject. The administering can be performed in a clinical setting (e.g., at a clinic or a hospital), in an assisted living facility, or at a pharmacy.
[0107] The neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide can be administered to a subject that has been diagnosed as having a neurological disorder associated with neuron death. In some non-limiting embodiments, the subject is a man or a woman, an adult, or an adolescent. The subject can have experienced one or more symptoms of the neurological disorder associated with neuron death for at least one year, two years, three years, four years, or five years. The subject can also be diagnosed as having a later or severe form (an advanced stage) of the neurological disorder associated with neuron death.
[0108] In some embodiments of any of the methods described herein, the subject is administered at least one (e.g., at least 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 20, 25, or 30) dose of a composition containing at least one (e.g., one, two, three, or four) of any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein. In any of the methods described herein, the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein) can be administered intravenously, intraarterially, subcutaneously, intraperitoneally, intracranially, ocularly, or intramuscularly to the subject. In some embodiments, the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition is administered intracranially, ocularly, or to the spinal fluid.
[0109] In some embodiments, the subject is administered the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein) and at least one additional therapeutic agent. The at least one additional therapeutic agent can be selected from the group consisting of: mexiletine, phenytoin, baclofen, dantrolene, carbamazepine, corticosteroids, -interferons, glatiramer, fingolimod, natalizumab, mitoxantrone, aspirin, tissue plasminogen activator, anti-cholinergics (e.g., benzotropine and trihexyphenidyl), glutamate (NMDA) blocking drugs (e.g., amantadine), riluzole, cholesterase inhibitors (e.g., donepezil, galactamine, and rivastigmine), memantine, levodopa, carbidopa, dopamine agonists (e.g., pramipexole, ropinicole, and apomorphine), monoamine oxidase B inhibitors (e.g., selegiline and vasagiline), catechol O-methyl transferase inhibitors (e.g., tolcapone and entracapone), tetrabenazine, and anti-psychotic drugs (e.g., haloperidol and clozapine). In some embodiments, at least one additional therapeutic agent and at least one neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein) are administered in the same composition (e.g., the same pharmaceutical composition). In some embodiments, the at least one additional therapeutic agent and the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide are administered to the subject using different routes of administration (e.g., at least one additional therapeutic agent delivered by oral administration and the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide delivered by intravenous administration).
[0110] In any of the methods described herein, the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein) and, optionally, at least one additional therapeutic agent can be administered to the subject at least once a week (e.g., once a week, twice a week, three times a week, four times a week, once a day, twice a day, or three times a day). In some embodiments, at least two different neuroprotective molecules and/or C-myc oligonucleotides are administered in the same composition (e.g., a liquid composition). In some embodiments, the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide and at least one additional therapeutic agent are administered in the same composition (e.g., a liquid composition). In some embodiments, the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide and the at least one additional therapeutic agent are administered in two different compositions (e.g., a liquid composition containing the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide and a solid oral composition containing at least one additional therapeutic agent). In some embodiments, the at least one additional therapeutic agent is administered as a pill, tablet, or capsule. In some embodiments, the at least one additional therapeutic agent is administered in a sustained-release oral formulation.
[0111] In some embodiments, the one or more additional therapeutic agents can be administered to the subject prior to administering the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein). In some embodiments, the one or more additional therapeutic agents can be administered to the subject after administering the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein). In some embodiments, the one or more additional therapeutic agents and the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein) are administered to the subject such that there is an overlap in the bioactive period of the one or more additional therapeutic agents and the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides described herein) in the subject.
[0112] In some embodiments, the subject can be administered the neuroprotective molecule, C-myc oligonucleotide, or pharmaceutical composition (e.g., any of the neuroprotective molecules, C-myc oligonucleotides, or pharmaceutical compositions described herein) over an extended period of time (e.g., over a period of at least 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks, 1 month, 2 months, 3 months, 4 months, 5 months, 6 months, 7 months, 8 months, 9 months, 10 months, 11 months, 12 months, 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, 4 years, 5 years, or 10 years). A skilled medical professional may determine the length of the treatment period using any of the methods described herein for diagnosing or following the effectiveness of treatment (e.g., using the methods above and those known in the art). As described herein, a skilled medical professional can also change the identity and number (e.g., increase or decrease) of neuroprotective molecules or C-myc oligonucleotides (and/or one or more additional therapeutic agents) administered to the subject and can also adjust (e.g., increase or decrease) the dosage or frequency of administration of the neuroprotective molecule or C-myc oligonucleotide (and/or one or more additional therapeutic agents) to the subject based on an assessment of the effectiveness of the treatment (e.g., using any of the methods described herein and known in the art). A skilled medical professional can further determine when to discontinue treatment (e.g., for example, when the subject's symptoms are significantly decreased).
Methods of Identifying a Candidate Translation Inhibitory Nucleic Acid
[0113] Also provided herein are methods of identifying a candidate translation inhibitory nucleic acid. These methods include (a) attaching to the 5 end of a nucleic acid sequence of between 20-50 nucleotides (e.g., 20-30 nucleotides, 30-40 nucleotides, or 40-50 nucleotides) at least four (e.g., at least five, six, or seven) guanosine-containing nucleotides, and (b) determining the level of protein translation in the presence of the molecule produced in (a). A decrease (e.g., a significant or detectable decrease) in the level of protein translation in the presence of the molecule produced in (a) relative to the level of protein synthesis in the absence of the molecule produced in (a) identifies the molecule produced in (a) as a candidate translation inhibitory nucleic acid.
[0114] In some embodiments, the nucleic acid sequence of between 20-50 nucleotides contains at least 50% (e.g., at least 55%, 60%, 65%, or 70%) guanosine-containing/cytosine-containing nucleotides. In some embodiments, the sequence of between 20-50 nucleotides is at least 80% identical to a contiguous sequence between nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 50 of a mature human tRNA sequence (e.g., any of the tRNA sequences described or referenced herein, or any mature human tRNA sequence known in the art). The nucleic acid sequence of between 20-50 nucleotides can contain at least one modified nucleotide (e.g., can contain any of the base modifications or sugar modifications described herein). The nucleic acid sequence of between 20-50 nucleotides can also contain at least one modification in the phosphate (phosphodiester) backbone (e.g., any of the linking moieties between two adjoining nucleotides described herein). The molecule produced in (a) can also contain a 5 and/or 3 protective group (e.g., a protective group that decreases nuclease degradation of the molecule produced in (a)) (e.g., any of the 5 or 3 protective groups described herein or known in the art).
[0115] In some embodiments of these methods, the level of protein translation is determined in a cell (e.g., a fibroblast, a neuron (e.g., a motor neuron), an endothelial cell, an epithelial cell, or a muscle cell) (e.g., a cell in vitro). In some embodiments, the level of protein translation is determined in a cell lysate (e.g., a reticulocyte lysate). In some embodiments of all of the above methods, the cell is a human cell.
[0116] The level of protein synthesis in these methods can be the total amount of protein translation that occurs over a specific period of time (e.g., at least 2 hours, 6 hours, 12 hours, 16 hours, 20 hours, or 24 hours) or the rate of protein synthesis. Methods for measuring or detecting protein translation are described herein. Additional methods for measuring or detecting protein synthesis are known in the art.
[0117] Candidate translation inhibitory nucleic acids identified in these methods can be further modified by the incorporation of modified nucleotides (e.g., modified bases and/or sugars), by introducing a modification in the phosphate (phosphodiester) backbone (e.g., introduction of one of the linking moieties described herein), and/or by adding a 5 and/or 3 blocking group to the molecule produced in (a), and further tested to determine the molecule's ability to decrease protein translation.
EXAMPLE
[0118] The invention is further described in the following examples, which do not limit the scope of the invention described in the claims.
Example 1. Endogenous 5-tiRNAs Inhibit Translation
[0119] Experiments were performed in order to determine whether natural 5- and 3-tRNA fragments (tiRNAs) purified from angiogenin-treated U2OS cells would inhibit translation of uncapped luciferase transcripts in rabbit reticulocyte lysate (RRL). The following methods were used to perform these experiments.
[0120] Tissue Culture and Cell Treatment
[0121] U2OS cells were maintained at 37 C. in a CO.sub.2 incubator in Minimal Essential Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (Sigma) and 1% of penicillin/streptomycin (Sigma). The cells were treated with angiogenin (0.5 g/mL) as described in Kedersha et al., Methods Enzymol. 448:521-552, 2008.
[0122] Isolation of tiRNAs
[0123] Extraction of tiRNAs from angiogenin-treated U2OS cells was done as previously described (Yamasaki et al., J Cell Biol. 185:35-42, 2009).
[0124] In Vitro Translation of mRNA Reporters in Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysates (RRLs)
[0125] The Flexi Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysate (RRL) System (Promega) was used for the in vitro analysis of mRNA translation according to the manufacture's recommendations with some modifications. In all cases, translation reactions (10 l final volume) contained 70% of reticulocyte lysates or mixtures of RRL supplemented with 20% of microccocal nuclease-treated U2OS extract (RRL+20% U2OS lysate) and 8 units of RNasin Ribonuclease Inhibitor (Promega).
[0126] Fifty ng of uncapped Firefly RNA (Promega) were used per translation reaction. One hundred picomoles of control RNAs or tiRNAs were added to translation reactions, mixed, and incubated for 30 minutes at 30 C. The reactions were stopped at 4 C. and the activity of Firefly luciferase was measured using of the translation reactions with the Luciferase Assay System (Promega) according to the manufacture's recommendations (2 second measurement delay followed by 10 second measurement read).
[0127] Northern Blot Analysis
[0128] RNA was separated on either a 10% or 15% TBE-UREA Gel (Invitrogen) and transferred to Supercharge nylon transfer membranes (Nytran SPC; 0.45 m pore size; Whatman). The RNA on the membranes was UV cross-linked using a FB-UVXL-1000 cross-linker (Fisher Scientific). The membranes were then pre-hybridized in hybridization solution (5SSC, 20 mM Na.sub.2HPO.sub.4 pH 7.4, 7% SDS, 1Denhardt's) at 47 C. for 30 minutes and then hybridized with the .sup.32P 5-end labeled oligonucleotide probe (ME8: 5CTTTATGTTTTTGGCGTCTTCCATCTCGAGGC3; SEQ ID NO: 175) overnight at 47 C. The membranes were washed twice for 15 minutes at 47 C. with 3SSC/5% SDS and once with 1SSC/1% SDS for 15 minutes at room temperature. After washing, RNA signals were detected by autoradiography on X-Omat film (Kodak) after overnight exposure at 80 C.
[0129] Results
[0130] Uncapped Firefly luciferase mRNA (Promega) was translated in RRL in the presence of a control RNA mix (Ctrl 1-2-3; derived from Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) or randon sequences), natural 5-tiRNAs (Nat 5 end), or natural 3-tiRNAs (Nat 3end) using the methods described above. Luciferase expression was compared to the level of expression in the absence of RNA (No RNA=100%). The data from these experiments show that natural 5-tiRNAs (but not 3-tiRNAs) gel-purified from angiogenin-treated U2OS cells significantly inhibit translation of uncapped luciferase transcripts in RRLs (
Example 2. Selected Synthetic 5-tiRNAs are Potent Inhibitors of Translation
[0131] Since natural tiRNA preparations are contaminated with ribosomal and mRNA fragments, experiments were performed to compare the activity of synthetic 5-end phosphorylated 5-tiRNAs (5-tiRNAs) and unphosphorylated 3-tiRNAs (3-tiRNAs) (Emara et al., J Biol. Chem. 285:10959-10968, 2010) in the above-described in vitro RRL translation assay. The synthetic tiRNAs used in this study were synthesized by Integrated DNA Technology and were at least 95% homogenous. The synthetic sequences used in these experiments were:
TABLE-US-00002 Ctrl1: (SEQIDNO:1) 5-UGAAGGGUUUUUUGUGUCUCUAUUUCCUUC-3 (piR006650); Ctrl2: (SEQIDNO:2) 5-phospho-UGUGAGUCACGUGAGGGCAGAAUCUGC UC-3 (piR58620); Ctrl3: (SEQIDNO:3) 5-phospho-GCAUUCACUUGGAUAGUAAAUCCAAGC UGAA-3 (random); 5Ala: (SEQIDNO:4) 5-Phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCG UGC-3; 5-Val: (SEQIDNO:5) 5-phospho-GUUUCCGUAGUGUAGUGGUUAUCACGU UCGCC-3; 5-Gly-GCC: (SEQIDNO:6) 5-Phospho-GCAUGGGUGGUUCAGUGGUAGAAUUCU CGC-3; 5-GlyCCC: (SEQIDNO:7) 5-phospho-GCGCCGCUGGUGUAGUGGUAUCAUGCA AGAU-3; 5-Pro: (SEQIDNO:8) 5-Phospho-GGCUCGUUGGUCUAGGGGUAUGAUUCU CGG-3; 5-Gln: (SEQIDNO:9) 5-Phospho-GGUUCCAUGGUGUAAUGGUUAGCACUC UG-3; 5-Cys: (SEQIDNO:10) 5-Phospho-GGGGGUAUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCAUU UGA-3; 5-Met: (SEQIDNO:11) 5-Phospho-GCCUCGUUAGCGCAGUAGGUAGCGCGU CAGU-3; 5-Met-I: (SEQIDNO:12) 5-Phospho-AGCAGAGUGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGUGCU GG-3; 3-Ala: (SEQIDNO:13) 5-CUUAGCAUGCACGAGGCCCCGGGUUCAAUCCCC GGCACCUCCA-3; 3-Arg: (SEQIDNO:14) 5-GGAUCAGAAGAUUGAGGGUUCGGGUCCCUUCGU GGUCG-3; 3-Gly: (SEQIDNO:15) 5-CCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGUUCGAUUCCCGGCCA AUGCA-3; 3-Gln: (SEQIDNO:16) 5-GACUCUGAAUCCAGCGAUCCGAGUUCAAAUCUC GGUGGAACCU-3; and 3-Pro: (SEQIDNO:17) 5-UUAGGAUGCGAGAGGUCCCGGGUUCAAAUCCCG GACGAGCCC-3.
[0132] The levels of luciferase mRNA were also determined in these experiments using Northern blot using the methods described above.
[0133] The data from these experiments show that although several tiRNAs significantly inhibit translation, 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala and 5-tiRNA.sup.Cys are particularly potent translational inhibitors (
[0134] Additional experiments were performed to determine whether 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala and 3-tiRNA.sup.Ala inhibit the translation of capped luciferase transcripts. These experiments were performed using the RRL translation assay described above with 10 nm of capped Firefly mRNA. To prepare capped Firefly luciferase mRNA, 2 g of commercial uncapped Firefly luciferase mRNA (Promega) was capped by Vaccinia Virus Capping enzyme using ScriptCap m.sup.7G Capping System (EPICENTRE Biotechnologies) according to the manufacture's recommendations. Capped mRNA was purified by standard ethanol precipitation and quantified by spectrophotometry (Beckman DU 640 instrument).
[0135] The data from these experiments show that 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala (but not 3-tiRNA.sup.Ala) also significantly inhibits the translation of capped luciferase transcripts (
Example 3. Encephalomyocarditis Virus Internal Ribosomal Entry Site (EMCV IRES)-Mediated Translation
[0136] Additional experiments were performed in order to determine the role of eIF4G in tiRNA-mediated translational repression. In these experiments, the translation of capped or uncapped bicistronic reporter transcripts encoding an upstream Firefly luciferase and a downstream EMCV IRES-driven Renilla luciferase in the absence or presence of tiRNAs was quantitated. These experiments were performed using the methods generally described above with the modifications described below.
[0137] RNA transcripts for use in the RRL assay were prepared by first linearizing the bicistronic reporter plasmid (pF/R) (Bochkov et al., BioTechniques 41:283-284, 286, 288, 2006) by digestion with HpaI (New England Biolabs), separating the cut plasmids on 1% agarose gel, and then purifying the plasmids from the gel with QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen). Riboprobe T7 in vitro transcription System (Promega) was used to synthesize pF/R RNA using T7 RNA Polymerase according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Subsequently, in vitro transcribed RNA was purified using Trizol (Invitrogen) extraction followed by isopropanol precipitation. Purified RNA was analyzed for purity on a formaldehyde gel and quantified by spectrophotometry (Beckman DU 640). One hundred nanograms of pF/R bicistronic mRNA were used per translation reaction and the activities of Firefly and Renilla luciferase were measured using of translation reactions with the Dual-Luciferase Reporter Assay System (Promega).
[0138] The data from these experiments show that 5- (but not 3-tiRNA.sup.Ala) significantly reduces the Firefly/Renilla luciferase ratio (
[0139] The recruitment of eIF4G to the EMCV IRES is critically dependent upon binding to the J-K domain which includes a UA.sub.6 bifurcation loop located upstream from the AUG translation start site. A variant bifurcation loop (UA.sub.7) reduces the binding of eIF4G to reduce translation efficiency and infectivity of encephalomyocarditis virus. Additional experiments were performed to compare the ability of control RNAs and tiRNAs to inhibit the translation of luciferase from monocistronic luciferase constructs expressing the wild type (UA.sub.6) or mutant (UA.sub.7) EMCV IRES. The experiments were performed using the methods generally described above with the modifications described below.
[0140] The pCDNA3-EMCV-R-luc (EMCV-UA6) plasmid used in these experiments was prepared by amplifying a fragment of the pF/R plasmid encoding EMCV IRES by PCR and subcloning the fragment into pCDNA3 vector using BamHI and XhoI sites. The ORF of Renilla luciferase was amplified by PCR and inserted into pCDNA3-EMCV construct using XhoI and XbaI sites.
[0141] RNA transcripts for use in the RRL assay were prepared by first linearizing the plasmids pCDNA3-EMCV-R-luc (EMCV-UA.sub.6), pRL-5boxB, and pEMCV-RL-5boxB by digestion with XbaI (New England Biolabs), and separating and purifying the linearized plasmids as described above. Riboprobe T7 in vitro transcription System (Promega) was used to synthesize corresponding RNA and the RNA was purified as described above. Luciferase expression was also measured as described above.
[0142] The resulting data show that 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala does not inhibit translation from the wild type (UA.sub.6) IRES (
[0143] The resulting data show that eIF4E does not competitively inhibit tiRNA.sup.Ala-induced translational repression (
Example 4. 5-tiRNAs Displace eIF4G
[0144] Additional experiments were performed to determine whether 5-tiRNAs displace eIF4G from RNA. In these experiments, biotin-tagged capped or uncapped luciferase transcripts were added to heterologous (80% RRL+20% U2OS) lysates containing control RNA or tiRNAs in the above described in vitro translation assays. After streptavidin pull down, the reporter RNA-bound proteins were quantitated by immunoblotting. These experiments were performed as described above with the additions or modifications described below.
[0145] Poly-A biotinylated mRNAs used for streptavidin pull-down assays were prepared by polyadenylating capped or uncapped pRL-5boxB RNAs using Poly(A) Polymerase Tailing Kit (EPICENTRE Biotechnologies) according to the manufacturer's recommendation, but in the presence of 10 nM biotin-ATP (PerkinElmer).
[0146] Streptavidin agarose beads (Invitrogen) (40 L per sample) were washed twice with RNAse-free Biotin Binding Buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% NP-40). Five hundred pmoles of biotinylated RNAs were added to streptavidin beads and incubated for 1 hour at room temperature with rotation in 0.75 mL of Biotin Binding Buffer. After incubation, immobilized biotinylated RNA-streptavidin complexes were washed twice with RNAse-free Wash Buffer II (15 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.2, 750 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% NP-40) and once with ice-cold RNAse-free Wash Buffer I (15 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.2, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% NP-40) at room temperature to remove unbound RNA. Pre-cleared U2OS lysates (200 l of lysate per reaction, corresponding to 20% of lysate (in Lysis Buffer: 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5% NP-40, with protease inhibitor cocktail Complete, Roche) prepared from one 15-cm dish of 80% confluent U2OS cells) were added to the biotinylated RNA-streptavidin bead complexes, incubated for 2 hours at 4 C. with rotation, and washed 3 times with Wash Buffers (15 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.2, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% NP-40) containing different NaCl concentrations (0.1 M, 0.3 M or 0.5 M). Proteins were eluted using 60 l of 1SDS PAGE Loading Buffer.
[0147] For pull-down of biotinylated polyA mRNAs, 200 ng of capped or uncapped pRL-5boxB mRNAs were used for in vitro translation in rabbit reticulocyte lysate supplemented with 20% U2OS extract under the conditions described above. This heterologous in vitro translation system (RRL with cell extract) is capable of translating mRNAs with similar to Flexi Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysate System efficiency, but allows for the detection of eIF4G (human) by Western Blotting (the antibodies used do not detect eIF4G of rabbit origin). One hundred picomoles of control RNAs or tiRNAs were added to translation reactions. After completion of translation, streptavidin agarose beads (Invitrogen) (40 L per sample) were added to reactions and incubated at 4 C. for 30 minutes. Streptavidin beads were precipitated by centrifugation (1000 rpm, 5 minutes), the supernatants were removed, and the beads were washed once with ice-cold Wash buffer (15 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.2, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% NP-40). The resulting mRNA-protein complexes were eluted from the beads using 60 l of 1SDS PAGE Loading Buffer.
[0148] For Western blotting, proteins were separated on a 4-20% gradient SDS-PAGE (Invitrogen) and transferred to nitrocellulose filter membranes (0.45 m pore size; Invitrogen). The membranes were blocked with 5% normal horse serum (NHS) in 1TBS at room temperature for 1 hour and incubated with protein-specific antibodies in TBS containing 5% NHS overnight at 4 C. The membranes were washed three times with 1TBS containing 0.1% Tween-20 and incubated with secondary antibodies conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (GE Healthcare). After washing, the specific proteins were detected using the Super Signal chemiluminescent detection system (Pierce) and autoradiography on X-Omat film (Kodak).
[0149] The data from these experiments show that uncapped RNA is bound to eIF4G, but not eIF4E (
Example 5. 5-tiRNAs Displace eIF4F from the m.SUP.7.G Cap
[0150] Additional experiments were performed in order to determine whether 5-tiRNAs affect eIF4F:cap interactions. For these experiments, eIF4E complexes were assembled (e.g., eIF4F (eIF4E:eIF4G) and eIF4E:4E-BP1) on m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose from U2OS cell lysates. The Sepharose-bound complexes were incubated with 3-end biotinylated control or tiRNAs before analyzing retained components of the eIF4E-containing complexes using Western blotting. The methods used to perform these experiments are described in detail below.
[0151] 7-Methyl GTP Sepharose Chromatography
[0152] A 7-methyl-GTP-Sepharose 4B (m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose, GE Healthcare) suspension was washed twice with ice-cold RNAse-free Buffer A (15 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.0, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA) to remove sodium azide. U2OS cells were grown until 70-80% confluence in 15-cm dishes under standard conditions, and then collected by scraping with Lysis Buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5% NP-40) supplemented with protease inhibitors (Protease Inhibitor Cocktail Complete, Roche) into Eppendorf tubes followed by tumbling at 4 C. for 15 minutes. Cell debris and nuclei were removed by centrifugation (20 minutes, 13200 rpm, 4 C.), the cytoplasmic fraction (supernatant) was applied to pre-washed m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose, and incubated for 1 hour at 4 C. Typically, 10-20 l of m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose suspension was used per sample of synthetic RNA (50 or 100 pmoles). After incubation, the m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose was washed three times with Lysis Buffer and m.sup.7GTP-bound protein complexes were divided into equal parts. Synthetic RNAs (50 or 100 pmoles, final concentrations 20-40 nM) were added to the complexes and incubated for 1 hour at 4 C. Unbound proteins were removed by washing once with Lysis Buffer and the proteins bound to m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose were eluted with 60 l of 1SDS PAGE Loading Buffer. Eluted proteins were analyzed by Western Blotting using protein-specific antibodies.
[0153] Goat polyclonal anti-eIF3b, goat polyclonal anti-eIF4A, rabbit polyclonal anti-eIF4G, mouse monoclonal anti-eIF4E were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. Rabbit polyclonal anti-eIF4EBP1 was purchased from Cell Signaling. Anti-mouse, anti-goat, and anti-rabbit secondary antibodies conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) were purchased from GE Healthcare.
[0154] The resulting data show that although control RNAs did not displace initiation factors from m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose, 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala (but not 3-tiRNA.sup.Ala) completely displaces eIF4G and eIF4A, and partially displaces (50%) eIF4E from the beads (
Example 6. Structure/Function Analyses of tiRNAs
[0155] tRNA.sup.Ala and tRNA.sup.Cys are the only human tRNAs with terminal oligo-guanine (TOG) motifs (4-5 guanine residues) at their 5 ends (up-to-date alignments for H. sapiens tRNAs can be found at the Lowe Lab website at the address: lowelab.ucsc.edu/GtRNAdb/Hsapi19/Hsapi19-align.html) (see, secondary structure of tRNA.sup.Ala,
[0156] Additional experiments were performed to determine whether these 5-TOG motifs are required for translation repression. In these experiments, the ability of truncation and substitution mutants to inhibit translation was determined using the RRL translation assays described herein using Firefly luciferase mRNAs. The specific tiRNAs and control oligonucleotides used in these experiments were synthesized and purified by Integrated DNA Technology (at least 95% homogenous), and are listed below.
TABLE-US-00003 Ctrl1: (SEQIDNO:1) 5-UGAAGGGUUUUUUGUGUCUCUAUUUCCUUC-3 (piR006650) Ctrl2: (SEQIDNO:2) 5-phospho-UGUGAGUCACGUGAGGGCAGAAUCUGCUC- 3 (piR58620) Ctrl3: (SEQIDNO:3) 5-phospho-GCAUUCACUUGGAUAGUAAAUCCAAGCUGA A-3 (random) 5Ala: (SEQIDNO:4) 5-phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCG UGC-3 U4G: (SEQIDNO:18) 5-phospho-UGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCG UGC-3 4G: (SEQIDNO:19) 5-phospho-GGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCGUGC- 3 UU3G: (SEQIDNO:20) 5-phospho-UUGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCG UGC-3 3G: (SEQIDNO:21) 5-phospho-GGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCGUGC- 3 GG-UU: (SEQIDNO:22) 5-phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUUUUAGAGCGCG UGC-3 27mer: (SEQIDNO:23) 5-phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCG-3 24mer: (SEQIDNO:24) 5-phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGC-3 21mer: (SEQIDNO:25) 5-phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAG-3
[0157] To determine whether the 5-TOG structural feature is required for translational repression the ability of truncation and substitution mutants of tiRNAs (
[0158] Additional experiments were performed to determine whether the ability of the 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala mutants to inhibit mRNA translation closely correlates with their ability to displace eIF4F from m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose, or their ability to induce stress granule assembly (when transfected into U2OS cells). The m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose experiments were performed as described above using the 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala mutants described herein. The transfection of U2OS cells and the methods for determining stress granule assembly are described below.
[0159] Cell Transfections
[0160] Cells were transfected with the RNA oligonucleotides using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen). Before transfection, RNA-complexes were pre-incubated in serum-free medium (Opti-MEM medium, Invitrogen) for 20 minutes at room temperature. U2OS cells (110.sup.5/well) were plated in 24-well plates for 24 hours, and then transfected with 750 nM synthetic tiRNAs using 2.5 l Lipofectamine 2000.
[0161] Immunofluorescence Microscopy and Quantification of Stress Granules
[0162] Cells (110.sup.5) were seeded onto coverslips (Fisher Scientific) and were transfected with synthetic tiRNAs using Lipofectamine 2000 24-hours later (Invitrogen). After 7 hours, the cells were fixed in 4% para-formaldehyde for 15 minutes and permeabilized using 100% chilled methanol for 10 minutes. The cells were rinsed several times with PBS and incubated overnight with blocking buffer (5% normal horse serum in PBS containing 0.02% sodium azide) at 4 C. An appropriate primary antibody diluted in blocking buffer (1:200 for anti-eIF3b, anti-eIF4G, and anti-G3BP antibody) was then added to the cells and incubated for 1 hour at room temperature or overnight at 4 C. (Kedersha et al., Methods Enzymol. 448:521-522, 2007). The cells were washed three times with PBS and incubated with the appropriate secondary antibodies (Jackson Immunoresearch, ML grade) diluted 1:200 in blocking buffer containing 0.5 g/ml Hoechst 33258 dye (Molecular probes) for 1 hour at room temperature. After washing with PBS, the cover slips were mounted in polyvinyl mounting medium, and the cells were viewed and photographed with an Eclipse E800 (Nikon) microscope equipped with a digital camera (CCD-SPOT RT; Diagnostic Instrument) using 60 oil immersion objective lens. The images were merged and analyzed using Adobe Photoshop (v. 10).
[0163] Quantification of Stress Granules
[0164] U2OS cells (110.sup.5) were seeded onto coverslips (Fisher Scientific) and were transfected 24 hours later with the indicated RNA oligonucleotides (final concentration of 750 nM) using Lipofectamine 2000. After 7 hours, the cells were subjected to immunofluorescence microscopy as described above. The coverslips were coded and all quantifications were done blindly and repeated at least twice. The percentage of cells with stress granules was quantified by counting 200-350 cells/experiment.
[0165] The resulting data show that the ability of 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala and its mutants to inhibit mRNA translation closely correlates with their ability to displace eIF4F from m.sup.7GTP-Sepharose (
[0166] Additional immunoblotting experiments were performed to determine whether transfection with these oligonucleotides induced the phosphorylation of eIF2, a classical trigger of stress granule assembly. These data show that transfection of wild type or mutant 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala does not induce phosphorylation of eIF2 (
Example 7. Addition of 5-TOG Activates 5-tiRNA.SUP.Met
[0167] Additional experiments were performed to confirm the importance of the 5-TOG motif for tiRNA activity. In these experiments, the first 5 nucleotides of non-TOG-containing 5-tiRNA.sup.Met was substituted with 5 guanine residues (
Example 8. Identification of tiRNA-Interacting
[0168] Pull-down of RNA-protein complexes using biotinylated control RNA or 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala immobilized on streptavidin beads was used to purify proteins that interact with these RNAs. RNA-bound proteins were identified by mass spectrometry. Independent pull-down experiments were performed to confirm the ability of several of these proteins to interact with tiRNA.sup.Ala These experiments were performed using biotinylated control or 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala using streptavidin beads as described above. The individual 3-biotinylated oligonucleotides used in these assays were synthesized by and purchased from Integrated DNA Technology (listed below). Silver staining and mass spectrometry identification of tiRNA-binding proteins was performed as described below.
[0169] Biotinylated Oligonucleotides
TABLE-US-00004 Ctrl1-bio: (SEQIDNO:27) 5-UGAAGGGUUUUUUGUGUCUCUAUUUCCUUC-3- biotin Ctrl2-bio: (SEQIDNO:28) 5-phospho-UGUGAGUCACGUGAGGGCAGAAUCUGCUC- 3-biotin Ctrl3-bio: (SEQIDNO:29) 5-Phospho-GCAUUCACUUGGAUAGUAAAUCCAAGCUGA A-3-biotin 5-Ala-bio: (SEQIDNO:30) 5-phospho-GGGGGUGUAGCUCAGUGGUAGAGCGCG UGC-3-biotin 3-Ala-bio: (SEQIDNO:31) 5-CUUAGCAUGCACGAGGCCCCGGGUUCAAUCCCCGGC ACCUCCA-3-biotin
[0170] Silver Staining of SDS PAGE Gels
[0171] To detect proteins recovered from affinity purification with biotinylated RNAs, eluted protein samples were run on gradient 4-20% SDS PAGE gels (Invitrogen) and fixed with Protein Fixation Buffer (30% ethanol: 10% acetic acid) for 30 minutes. SilverSNAP Stain Kit II (Pierce) was used according to the manufacture's recommendation to detect proteins.
[0172] Mass Spectrometry Identification of tiRNA-Binding Proteins
[0173] For mass spectrometry, protein solutions from affinity purification using 3-end biotinylated RNAs were precipitated with trichloroacetic acid (TCA). Briefly, eluted protein samples were adjusted to 20% final volume of TCA using 100% TCA (in water) solution. The resulting mixture was placed on ice for 20 minutes followed by centrifugation (20 minutes, 13200 rpm, 4 C.). Protein pellet was washed once with 1 ml of cold (20 C.) acetone (HPLC grade, Sigma), followed by centrifugation (20 minutes, 13200 rpm, 4 C.). The supernatant was carefully removed and the pellet was air-dried for 10 minutes at room temperature. The identification of tiRNA-binding proteins was done by Taplin Mass Spectrometry Facility according to standard protocols (Harvard Medical School).
[0174] The resulting data confirmed that several proteins involved in the regulation of RNA metabolism, including TDP-43 (TARDBP), Vigilin (HDLBP), YB-1 (YBX1), eIF4E, FXR1, eIF4G, CAPRINi (CAPRIN), Argonaute-2 (EIF2C2), and PABP1 (PABPC1) bind to 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala more strongly than control RNA (
Example 9. tiRNA-Binding Proteins are Required for 5-tiRNA.SUP.Ala.-Induced Stress Granule Assembly
[0175] Additional experiments were performed to determine whether the identified 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala binding proteins are required for translational repression. In these experiments, AGO2, PABP1, YB-1, Vigilin, and FXR1 were knocked down using siRNA prior to quantifying tiRNA-induced stress granule assembly in U2OS cells (assays performed as described above). These data show that, of the tested binding proteins, YB-1 was the only 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala binding protein required for the assembly of stress granules (
Example 10. Synthetic DNA Equivalents of 5-tiRNA.SUP.Ala .and Anti-Proliferative DNAs Inhibit Translation and Induce Stress Granule Formation
[0176] Experiments were performed to test the ability of synthetic DNA equivalents of 5-tiRNA.sup.Ala and anti-proliferative G-rich oligodeoxynucleotides (shown in
[0177] The resulting data show that 5-tiDNA.sup.Ala, AS1411, and c-myc oligodeoxynucleotides are potent inhibitors of translation in the RRL assay (none of these compounds alters the amount of luciferase RNA as assessed by Northern blotting analysis performed as described above) (
[0178] The data also show that the ability of the 5-tiRNAs to inhibit translation correlates with their ability to trigger stress granule assembly in cells (following cellular transfection with these molecules) (
Example 11. Cellular Uptake of Synthetic 5 G-rich Oligodeoxynucleotides
[0179] Additional experiments were performed in order to determine whether the 5 G-rich oligodeoxynucleotides would be taken up by motor neurons in the absence of transfection agents. In these experiments NSC34 cells were treated with biotin-labeled C-myc, biotin-labeled AS1411, or biotin-labeled C-rich control oligodeoxynucleotides and cellular uptake was detected using Cy3-streptavidin. The resulting data show that AS1411 and c-myc, but not control oligodeoxynucleotides were found in cytoplasmic puncta within NSC34 cells: a result that is consistent with endosomal uptake (
Example 12. Functional Effect of G-Rich Oligodeoxynucleotides
[0180] Additional experiments were performed to test the effect of the G-rich oligodeoxynucleotides on motor neurons. A first set of dose response experiments were performed in order to determine whether the tested G-rich oligodeoxynucleotides were toxic to motor neurons in vitro. These data show that the AS1411 and oligo-GT oligodeoxynucleotides markedly increased NSC34 cell death at the end of a 72-hour incubation (
[0181] A second set of experiments was performed to determine whether the tested G-rich oligodeoxynucleotides are neuroprotective. In these experiments NSC34 cells were cultured in the presence of the individual oligodeoxynucleotides, then subjected to nutrient (serum starvation) or mitochondrial (rotenone) stress for 24 hours. NSC34 cells treated with either 5-tiDNA.sup.Ala or c-myc oligodeoxynucleotides, but not AS1411 or oligo-GT oligodeoxynucleotides were significantly protected from the adverse effects of stress (cell death;
Other Embodiments
[0182] It is to be understood that while the invention has been described in conjunction with the detailed description thereof, the foregoing description is intended to illustrate and not limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the scope of the appended claims. Other aspects, advantages, and modifications are within the scope of the following claims.
TABLE-US-00005 SequenceAppendix AdditionaltRNAsequencesthatcanbeusedtogenerateanyoftheneuroprotective moleculesdescribedhereinarelistedbelow. Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna95-AlaAGC(58249908-58249836)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:42.26GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGCGGTAGAGCGCTCCCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGCGGGATCGACG CCCCCATTCTCTA(SEQIDNO:176) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna25-AlaAGC(26859897-26859969)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:46.89GGGGGATTAGCTCAAGCGGTAGGGTGCCTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGCAGGATCGACG CCTGCATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:177) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna87-AlaAGC(148284076-148284006)Ala(AGC)71bp Sc:48.21GGGGGTGTAGATCAGTGGTAGGGCGCACGCTTAGCATGCATGAGGCCCTGGGTCAATCCC CAGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:178) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna94-AlaAGC(58250620-58250548)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:54.62GGGGGATTAGCTCAAGCGGTAGAGCGCCTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGCAGGATCGATG CCTGCATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:179) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna160-AlaAGC(26881822-26881750)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:54.69GGGGAATTGGCTCAAGCGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGCAGGATCGACG CCTGCACTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:180) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna23-AlaAGC(26836235-26836307)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:54.69GGGGAATTGGCTCAAGCGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGCAGGATCGACG CCTGCACTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:181) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna90-AlaAGC(58295475-58295403)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:54.84GGGGAATTAGCGCAAGTGGTAGAGTGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:182) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna89-AlaAGC(58304654-58304582)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:57.89GGGGAATTAGCCCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:183) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna9-AlaAGC(88515195-88515267)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:59.85GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTCGCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCGCATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:184) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna18-AlaAGC(26781569-26781641)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:60.72GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCAATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:185) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna22-AlaAGC(26813585-26813657)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:61.81GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGCGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:186) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna93-AlaAGC(58272659-58272587)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:61.81GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGCGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:187) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna159-AlaAGC(26904057-26903985)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:62.45GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:188) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna19-AlaAGC(26790694-26790766)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:62.45GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:189) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna91-AlaAGC(58290710-58290638)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:62.45GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCATGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:190) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna166-AlaAGC(26680143-26680071)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:63.06GGGGAATTAGCTCAAATGGTAGAGCGCTCGCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGCGGGATCGATG CCCGCATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:191) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna20-AlaAGC(26795464-26795536)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:63.16GGGGAATTAGCTCAAGTGGTAGAGCGCTTGCTTAGCACGCAAGAGGTAGTGGGATCGATG CCCACATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:192) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna161-AlaAGC(26879341-26879269)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:63.36GGGGAATTAGCTCAGGCGGTAGAGCGCTCGCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGCGGGATCGACG CCCGCATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:193) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna24-AlaAGC(26838716-26838788)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:63.36GGGGAATTAGCTCAGGCGGTAGAGCGCTCGCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGCGGGATCGACG CCCGCATTCTCCA(SEQIDNO:194) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna3-AlaAGC(27127586-27127658)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:63.68GGGGGATTAGCTCAAATGGTAGAGCGCTCGCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGCGGGATCGATG CCCGCATCCTCCA(SEQIDNO:195) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna6-AlaAGC(67188978-67189050)Ala(AGC)73bp Sc:63.68GGGGGATTAGCTCAAATGGTAGAGCGCTCGCTTAGCATGCGAGAGGTAGCGGGATCGATG CCCGCATCCTCCA(SEQIDNO:196) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna68-AlaAGC(28795460-28795531)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:70.19GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGCACGAGGCCCCGGGTTCAATCC CTGGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:197) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna105-AlaAGC(28887899-28887828)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:71.23GGGGGTATAGCTCAGCGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGCACGAGGTCCTGGGTTCAATCC CCAATACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:198) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna67-AlaAGC(28786345-28786416)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:75.68GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGCACGAGGCCCTGGGTTCAATCC CCAGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:199) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna120-AlaAGC(28734064-28733993)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:75.78GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTAGCATGCATGAGGTCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCAGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:200) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna65-AlaAGC(28682912-28682983)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:76.69GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGTACGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAATCC CCGGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:201) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna101-AlaAGC(28939512-28939441)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:77.18GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGCACGAGGCCCCGGGTTCAATCC CCGGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:202) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna102-AlaAGC(28914271-28914200)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:77.18GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGCACGAGGCCCCGGGTTCAATCC CCGGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:203) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna108-AlaAGC(28871791-28871720)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:81.12GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTAGCATGCACGAGGTCCTGGGTTCGATCC CCAGTACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:204) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna117-AlaCGC(28771759-28771688)Ala(CGC)72bp Sc:56.63GGGGGTGTAGATCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTCGCATGTACGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAATCC CTGGTACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:205) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna70-AlaCGC(28805071-28805142)Ala(CGC)72bp Sc:70.09GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGTGCTTCGCATGTACGAGGCCCCGGGTTCGACCC CCGGCTCCTCCA(SEQIDNO:206) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna13-AlaCGC(156965527-156965598)Ala(CGC)72bp Sc:73.12GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCGCGCTTCGCATGTGTGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:207) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna119-AlaCGC(28749663-28749592)Ala(CGC)72bp Sc:74.81GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTCGCATGTATGAGGCCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:208) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna10-AlaCGC(26661710-26661781)Ala(CGC)72bp Sc:78.91GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTCGCATGTATGAGGTCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:209) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna18-AlaTGC(50190526-50190455)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:51.06GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGGATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGACTTTGGGTTGGATCC CCAGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:210) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna107-AlaTGC(28878626-28878556)Ala(TGC)71bp Sc:59.75GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGCCTCGGTTCGATCCC CGACACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:211) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna113-AlaTGC(28834191-28834120)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:67.60GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCACATGCTTTGCATGTGTGAGGCCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:212) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna104-AlaTGC(28893062-28892991)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:70.95GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGCCTCGGGTTCGATCC CCGACACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:213) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna8-AlaTGC(123990465-123990536)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:73.41GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCACGTATGAGGCCCCGGGTTCAATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:214) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna13-AlaTGC(123972325-123972254)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:74.45GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGCCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:215) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna8-AlaTGC(180566474-180566545)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:74.45GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGCCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:216) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna66-AlaTGC(28719201-28719272)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:78.55GGGGATGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGTCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCATCTCCA(SEQIDNO:217) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna110-AlaTGC(28865597-28865526)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:79.16GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGCATGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGTCCCGGGTTCGATCC CCGGCACCTCCA(SEQIDNO:218) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna11-ArgACG(45705567-45705495)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:68.07GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCTAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:219) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna138-ArgACG(27746395-27746323)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:68.07GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCTAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:220) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna156-ArgACG(27289674-27289602)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:68.07GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCTAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:221) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna36-ArgACG(27290931-27291003)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:68.07GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCTAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:222) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna7-ArgACG(22468750-22468822)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:72.37GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCCAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:223) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna6-ArgACG(26436347-26436419)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:72.37GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCCAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:224) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna8-ArgACG(26645705-26645777)Arg(ACG)73bp Sc:72.37GGGCCAGTGGCGCAATGGATAACGCGTCTGACTACGGATCAGAAGATTCCAGGTTCGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCG(SEQIDNO:225) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna23-ArgCCG(63446547-63446475)Arg(CCG)73bp Sc:65.49GACCCAGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCATCAGCCTCCGGAGCTGGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGT CCCATCTGGGTCG(SEQIDNO:226) Homo_sapiens_chr17random.trna1-ArgCCG(1739927-1739999)Arg(CCG)73 bpSc:65.49GACCCAGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCATCAGCCTCCGGAGCTGGGGATTGTG GGTTCGAGTCCCATCTGGGTCG(SEQIDNO:227) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna1-ArgCCG(3140676-3140748)Arg(CCG)73bpSc: 69.88GGCCGCGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGATTCCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAGT CCCTTCGTGGTCG(SEQIDNO:228) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna114-ArgCCG(28818780-28818708)Arg(CCG)73bp Sc:69.88GGCCGCGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGATTCCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAGT CCCTTCGTGGTCG(SEQIDNO:229) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna73-ArgCCG(28957144-28957216)Arg(CCG)73bp Sc:69.88GGCCGCGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGATTCCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAGT CCCTTCGTGGTCG(SEQIDNO:230) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna12-ArgCCT(3183919-3183991)Arg(CCT)73bp Sc:59.77GCCCCAGTGGCCTGATGGATAAGGTACTGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGT TCCACCTGGGGTA(SEQIDNO:231) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna3-ArgCCT(138675986-138676058)Arg(CCT)73bp Sc:67.28GCCCCAGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCATTGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGT CCCATCTGGGGTG(SEQIDNO:232) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna2-ArgCCT(3142902-3142974)Arg(CCT)73bpSc: 71.53GCCCCGGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCATTGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGT CCCACCCGGGGTA(SEQIDNO:233) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna21-ArgCCT(70542193-70542121)Arg(CCT)73bp Sc:73.41GCCCCAGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCACTGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGT CCCACCTGGGGTG(SEQIDNO:234) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna18-ArgCCT(70541596-70541668)Arg(CCT)73bp Sc:73.88GCCCCAGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCACTGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGT CCCACCTGGGGTA(SEQIDNO:235) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna2-ArgTCG(112000624-112000696)Arg(TCG)73bp Sc:56.18GGCCGTGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGACTTCGGATCAAAAGATTGCAGGTTTGAGT TCTGCCACGGTCG(SEQIDNO:236) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna124-ArgTCG(28618942-28618870)Arg(TCG)73bp Sc:69.08GACCACGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGACTTCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAAT CCCTTCGTGGTTG(SEQIDNO:237) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna3-ArgTCG(26407884-26407956)Arg(TCG)73bp Sc:69.55GACCACGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGACTTCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAAT CCCTTCGTGGTTA(SEQIDNO:238) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna19-ArgTCG(70542803-70542875)Arg(TCG)73bp Sc:70.52GACCGCGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGACTTCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAGT CCCTTCGTGGTCG(SEQIDNO:239) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna4-ArgTCG(26431025-26431097)Arg(TCG)73bp Sc:72.33GACCACGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGACTTCGGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCGAAT CCCTCCGTGGTTA(SEQIDNO:240) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna4-ArgTCG(87679308-87679380)Arg(TCG)73bp Sc:76.93GGCCGCGTGGCCTAATGGATAAGGCGTCTGACTTCGGATCAGAAGATTGCAGGTTCGAGT CCTGCCGCGGTCG(SEQIDNO:241) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna86-ArgTCT(157378098-157378025)Arg(TCT)74bp Sc:76.29GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATGGACGAGCGCGCTGGACTTCTAATCCAGAGGTTCCGGGTTCGAG TCCCGGCAGAGATG(SEQIDNO:242) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna4-ArgTCT(130142266-130142176)Arg(TCT)91bp Sc:67.17GGCTCTGTGGCGCAATGGATAGCGCATTGGACTTCTAGCTGAGCCTAGTGTGGTCATTCA AAGGTTGTGGGTTCGAGTCCCACCAGAGTCG(SEQIDNO:243) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna52-ArgTCT(27637942-27638028)Arg(TCT)87bp Sc:65.24GGCTCTGTGGCGCAATGGATAGCGCATTGGACTTCTAGCCTAAATCAAGAGATTCAAAGG TTGCGGGTTCGAGTCCCTCCAGAGTCG(SEQIDNO:244) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna3-ArgTCT(59075343-59075428)Arg(TCT)86bp Sc:71.13GGCTCTGTGGCGCAATGGATAGCGCATTGGACTTCTAGATAGTTAGAGAAATTCAAAGGT TGTGGGTTCGAGTCCCACCAGAGTCG(SEQIDNO:245) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna4-ArgTCT(7964968-7965055)Arg(TCT)88bpSc: 71.27GGCTCTGTGGCGCAATGGATAGCGCATTGGACTTCTAGTGACGAATAGAGCAATTCAAAG GTTGTGGGTTCGAATCCCACCAGAGTCG(SEQIDNO:246) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna9-ArgTCT(94085717-94085801)Arg(TCT)85bp Sc:71.18GGCTCCGTGGCGCAATGGATAGCGCATTGGACTTCTAGAGGCTGAAGGCATTCAAAGGTT CCGGGTTCGAGTCCCGGCGGAGTCG(SEQIDNO:247) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna20-AsnATT(146185653-146185726)Asn(ATT)74bp Sc:52.07GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTCAGAGCGTTCGGCTATTAACCGAACGGTGAGTAGTTCAAG ACCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:248) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna13-AsnGTT(144097086-144097161)Asn(GTT)76bp Sc:44.21GTCTCTGTGGCGCCATCGGTTAGTGCCTTCGGCTGTTTGAACCGAAAGGCTGGTGGTTCA AGCCCACCCAGAGATG(SEQIDNO:249) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna93-AsnGTT(147936754-147936681)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:46.92ATCTCCGTGGAGCAATTGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCCGTTAACCGGAAAGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCTACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:250) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna134-AsnGTT(16731553-16731480)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:48.81GTCTCTGTGGTGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCATAAGGTTGGTGGTTACAG ACCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:251) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna50-AsnGTT(159858089-159858162)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:49.69GTTTCTGTAGCGCGATCGGTTAGCGCCTTCGGCTGTTAAACGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGTT CCCACCCCGGGACA(SEQIDNO:252) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna10-AsnGTT(142481551-142481624)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:49.96GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTTGACTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTGGTGGTGCAAG CCCATCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:253) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna122-AsnGTT(143200273-143200200)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:49.96GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTTGACTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTGGTGGTGCAAG CCCATCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:254) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna123-AsnGTT(143020044-143019971)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:49.96GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTTGACTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTGGTGGTGCAAG CCCATCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:255) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna24-AsnGTT(146344161-146344234)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:49.96GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTTGACTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTGGTGGTGCAAG CCCATCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:256) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna30-AsnGTT(147875233-147875306)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:49.96GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTTGACTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTGGTGGTGCAAG CCCATCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:257) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna101-AsnGTT(147551200-147551127)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:51.19ATCTCCGTGGAGCAATTGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGGAAAGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCTACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:258) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna12-AsnGTT(143193197-143193270)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:53.66GTCTCTGTGGTGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCCGCTGTTAACCGAAAGCTTGGTGGTTTGAG CCCACCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:259) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna6-AsnGTT(17074545-17074618)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:56.35GTCTCTGTGGTGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCATAAGGTTGGTGGTTAGAG ACCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:260) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna97-AsnGTT(147592969-147592896)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:59.90GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGCTAGCGCGTTTGGCTGTTAACTAAAAAGTTGGTGGTTCGAA CACACCCAGAGGCG(SEQIDNO:261) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna11-AsnGTT(143012968-143013041)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:60.57GTCTCTGTGGTGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCCGCTGTTAACCGAAAGCTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:262) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna95-AsnGTT(147882314-147882241)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:60.57GTCTCTGTGGTGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCCGCTGTTAACCGAAAGCTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:263) Homo_sapiens_chr1_random.trna2-AsnGTT(906435-906508)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:66.79GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGCTAGCGCGTTTGGCTGTTAACTAAAAGGTTGGCGGTTCGAA CCCACCCAGAGGCG(SEQIDNO:264) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna113-AsnGTT(145987464-145987391)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:70.44GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTAGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCGGGGACG(SEQIDNO:265) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna115-AsnGTT(144690464-144690391)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:70.44GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTAGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCGGGGACG(SEQIDNO:266) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna89-AsnGTT(147978495-147978422)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:71.43GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGCTAGCGCGTTTGGCTGTTAACTAAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAA CCCACCCAGAGGCG(SEQIDNO:267) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna25-AsnGTT(146467429-146467502)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:72.61GTCTCTGTGGCGTAGTCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAAGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGAACG(SEQIDNO:268) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna103-AsnGTT(147497267-147497194)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:77.16GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATGGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCATCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:269) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna135-AsnGTT(16719740-16719667)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:77.65GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACTGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:270) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna7-AsnGTT(17088759-17088832)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:80.35GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGATTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:271) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna107-AsnGTT(147027053-147026980)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:80.52GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCATTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:272) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna108-AsnGTT(146865011-146864938)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:80.52GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCATTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:273) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna26-AsnGTT(146614739-146614812)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:82.24GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:274) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna83-AsnGTT(159664564-159664491)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:82.24GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:275) Homo_sapiens_chr10.trna4-AsnGTT(22558517-22558444)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:82.24GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:276) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna7-AsnGTT(30146174-30146101)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:82.24GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:277) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna31-AsnGTT(34161633-34161560)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:82.24GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:278) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna1-AsnGTT(1334562-1334635)Asn(GTT)74bpSc: 82.24GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAG CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:279) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna47-AsnGTT(159776655-159776728)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:83.66GTCTCTGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAACCGAAAGGTTGGTGGTTCGAT CCCACCCAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:280) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna48-AspGTC(159841212-159841283)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:30.22TCCTTGTTACTATAGTGGTAAGTATCTCTGCCTGTCATGCATGAGAGAGGGGGTCGATTC CCTGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:281) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna7-AspGTC(121426877-121426947)Asp(GTC)71bp Sc:32.33TCCTTGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTGTTTCTGCCTGTCATGTGGAGACTGGAGTTTGAGTCC CCAACAGGGAG(SEQIDNO:282) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna46-AspGTC(159768539-159768610)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:34.08TACTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGCGTATCCCCGTCTGTCACGCGGGAGAGCGGGGTTCGCTCT CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:283) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna3-AspGTC(185848859-185848789)Asp(GTC)71bp Sc:43.84TTCTTGTTAATATAGTGGTGAGTATTCCCACCTGTCATGCGGGAGACGGGGTTCAATTCC CTGATGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:284) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna22-AspGTC(141754243-141754172)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:54.87TCCTCATCAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACTGGGGTTCGATTC CCTGAGGAGGAG(SEQIDNO:285) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna6-AspGTC(76707881-76707810)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:54.95TCCTCGTTAGTATGGTGGTGAGTATCCCTGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCAACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:286) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna144-AspGTC(27659286-27659215)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:64.62TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTGTCCCCGTCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:287) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna69-AspGTC(159706900-159706829)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:288) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna72-AspGTC(159699519-159699448)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:289) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna75-AspGTC(159692109-159692038)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:290) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna78-AspGTC(159684728-159684657)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:291) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna81-AspGTC(159677310-159677239)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:292) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna10-AspGTC(123990217-123990146)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:293) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna12-AspGTC(123977915-123977844)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:294) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna4-AspGTC(94953930-94954001)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:295) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna38-AspGTC(8066352-8066281)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:296) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna45-AspGTC(27555432-27555503)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:297) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna48-AspGTC(27579502-27579573)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:72.92TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTGAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:298) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna5-AspGTC(97421412-97421483)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:74.76TCCTCGTTAGTATAGTGGTTAGTATCCCCGCCTGTCACGCGGGAGACCGGGGTTCAATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:299) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna30-CysGCA(34243572-34243501)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:51.58GGGGGTAGGGCTCAGGGATAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAATC TAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:300) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna19-CysGCA(148923309-148923238)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:57.52GGGGGTATAGCTCACAGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGTTACTCCCT(SEQIDNO:301) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna8-CysGCA(148884735-148884806)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:59.93GGGCGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCAGTTCAAATC TGGGTGCCCACT(SEQIDNO:302) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna14-CysGCA(148992848-148992919)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:60.15GGGGGTATAGCTCACAGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC TGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:303) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna11-CysGCA(148925979-148926050)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:65.84GGGCGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCAGTTCAAATC TGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:304) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna18-CysGCA(148941160-148941089)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:67.69GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAAATCAAGAGGTCCCTGATTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:305) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna23-CysGCA(148703854-148703783)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:68.91GGGGGTATAGTTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:306) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna16-CysGCA(149019276-149019205)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:69.30GGGGATATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCC(SEQIDNO:307) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna7-CysGCA(148874564-148874635)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:69.62GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCACTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAAGTCCTTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:308) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna10-CysGCA(148912749-148912820)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:69.82GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCTCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:309) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna29-CysGCA(34271534-34271463)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:70.63GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAAGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:310) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna25-CysGCA(148683770-148683699)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:71.19GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCAGTTCAAATC TGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:311) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna17-CysGCA(148975050-148974979)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:71.81GGGGGTATAGCTTAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCTT(SEQIDNO:312) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna21-CysGCA(148743233-148743162)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:73.76GGGGGTATAGCTTAGCGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:313) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna22-CysGCA(148705605-148705534)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:73.86GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCC(SEQIDNO:314) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna6-CysGCA(133433403-133433332)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:74.20GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:315) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna13-CysGCA(148963711-148963782)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:74.20GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:316) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna15-CysGCA(149035693-149035764)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:74.20GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:317) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna6-CysGCA(148659153-148659224)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:74.20GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:318) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna8-CysGCA(72499432-72499503)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:74.26GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:319) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna126-CysGCA(93754494-93754422)Cys(GCA)73bp Sc:74.38GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAAT CCGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:320) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna7-CysGCA(133430705-133430634)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:74.42GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:321) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna3-CysGCA(77824052-77824124)Cys(GCA)73bp Sc:74.95GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAAT CCGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:322) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna28-CysGCA(34279142-34279071)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:77.18GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:323) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna20-CysGCA(148917168-148917097)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:77.55GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGGTAGAGCACTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:324) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna15-CysGCA(34277424-34277495)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:77.71GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:325) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna26-CysGCA(34564341-34564270)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:77.71GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:326) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna27-CysGCA(34563584-34563513)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:77.71GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:327) Homo_sapiens_chr4.trna3-CysGCA(124649526-124649455)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:77.71GGGGGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTCAAATC CGGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:328) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna5-CysGCA(148638214-148638285)Cys(GCA)72bp Sc:79.54GGGGGCATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:329) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna21-GlnCTG(70282391-70282464)Gln(CTG)74bp Sc:20.83GGCAGTATGGTAGAGTGGTTAAGATCATGAACTCTGAAGTCAGAGATACTTGAATTTGAA TGCTGGTTCTGTCA(SEQIDNO:330) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna1-GlnCTG(17803142-17803219)Gln(CTG)78bp Sc:21.25GGCAGTGTAGCCCAGAGGTTCAAGGGCATTCGCTCTGGTATCAGAAGGGTCTGGGTTCAA ATCCCTTGTGCACTGCTT(SEQIDNO:331) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna5-GlnCTG(125695415-125695343)Gln(CTG)73bp Sc:22.97GAGCTGTAGCATAGTGATTAGGGACATGGACTCTGGAGCCAAATCTGCCTGGGTTCTAGT CCCAGCTGTCTCA(SEQIDNO:332) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna3-GlnCTG(73137449-73137521)Gln(CTG)73bp Sc:34.73GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTAAGCACCCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCAACCAGAGTTCCAGTC TCAGCGTGGACCT(SEQIDNO:333) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna114-GlnCTG(144943455-144943384)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:40.01GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGACCACTTTGGACTCTGAATACAGTGATCAGAGTTCAAGTC TCACTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:334) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna120-GlnCTG(144090748-144090677)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:44.40GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGAGCACTTTGGACTCTGAATACAGTGATCAGAGTTCAAGTC TCACTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:335) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna121-GlnCTG(143550864-143550793)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:44.40GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGAGCACTTTGGACTCTGAATACAGTGATCAGAGTTCAAGTC TCACTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:336) Homo_sapiens_chr1_random.trna1-GlnCTG(553277-553348)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:44.40GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGAGCACTTTGGACTCTGAATACAGTGATCAGAGTTCAAGTC TCACTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:337) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna22-GlnCTG(146267561-146267632)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:56.30GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTAAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCCATCTGAGTTCGAGTC TCTGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:338) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna131-GlnCTG(27867185-27867114)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:66.25GGCCCCATGGTGTAATGGTCAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGGACCC(SEQIDNO:339) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna42-GlnCTG(27371191-27371262)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:68.41GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCGGTAATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:340) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna112-GlnCTG(146204077-146204006)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:68.84GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTAAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCGAGTC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:341) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna28-GlnCTG(147452749-147452820)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:68.84GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTAAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCGAGTC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:342) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna15-GlnCTG(144674661-144674732)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:70.16GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCGAGTC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:343) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna19-GlnCTG(145971662-145971733)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:70.16GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCGAGTC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:344) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna146-GlnCTG(27623581-27623510)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:72.00GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAGTC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:345) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna7-GlnCTG(63948525-63948454)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:73.65GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:346) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna3-GlnCTG(7963795-7963866)Gln(CTG)72bpSc: 73.65GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:347) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna1-GlnCTG(18944381-18944452)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:73.65GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:348) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna49-GlnCTG(27595287-27595358)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:73.65GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:349) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna99-GlnCTG(29017428-29017357)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:73.65GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTCTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGAACCT(SEQIDNO:350) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna79-GlnTTG(37395973-37396045)Gln(TTG)73bp Sc:21.80GTGCAGAGTAGTACAGTGGTTAAACCATGGTCTTTGGAGCCAGACTGCCTGGGGTCGGAT CCCAGCTCTCACA(SEQIDNO:351) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna14-GlnTTG(3359814-3359885)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:30.33TAGGACTTGGTGTAATGGGTAGCACAGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTGGGTTCAATTC CTTTCGTCCTAG(SEQIDNO:352) Homo_sapiens_chr4.trna4-GlnTTG(40603572-40603500)Gln(TTG)73bp Sc:31.57GACCATGTGGCCTAAGGGAAAAGACATCTCACTTTGGGTCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTCAAGT CCTTTCATGGTCA(SEQIDNO:353) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna23-GlnTTG(117499050-117498979)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:33.55TAGGACATGGTGTAATAGGTAGAATGGAGAATTTTGAATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:354) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna84-GlnTTG(145545552-145545623)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:59.31GGTCCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGGCTTTGAATCCAGCAATCCGAGTTCGAATC TTGGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:355) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna130-GlnTTG(27871690-27871619)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:68.31GGCCCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTTTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:356) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna173-GlnTTG(26420025-26419954)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:68.31GGCCCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTTTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:357) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna174-GlnTTG(26419474-26419403)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:68.31GGCCCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTTTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:358) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna16-GlnTTG(44624889-44624960)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:73.77GGTCCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTTTGAATCCAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:359) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna29-GluCTC(147600896-147600964)Glu(CTC)69bp Sc:21.64TCCCTGGTAGTCTAGTGGCTAAAGTTTGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGGGACTGGTTGATTCCAG ATCAGGGGA(SEQIDNO:360) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna8-GluCTC(126895938-126895867)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:29.87CCCCTGGTGGTCTATCGGTTAGGATTCAGACCTCTCACCACTGCTACCCATGCTCGATTC CTGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:361) Homo_sapiens_chr18.trna1-GluCTC(41553749-41553820)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:32.13CCCCGGGTGGTGTAGTGGATGGGATTTGGCGCTCTCACCACCATGGCCCGGATTTGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:362) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna3-GluCTC(59667352-59667422)Glu(CTC)71bp Sc:33.87TCCTTGATGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTTGGTGCTCTCACTGCAGCAGCCTGGGTTCATTTCT CAGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:363) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna4-GluCTC(40928132-40928061)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:41.44CCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGCTTAGGATTCGGTGCTCTCACCGCTGCTGCCTGCGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:364) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna59-GluCTC(247135070-247135141)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:71.50TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGAAA(SEQIDNO:365) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna116-GluCTC(144110661-144110590)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:366) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna71-GluCTC(159705884-159705813)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:367) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna74-GluCTC(159698504-159698433)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:368) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna77-GluCTC(159691093-159691022)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:369) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna80-GluCTC(159683713-159683642)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:370) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna77-GluCTC(29057955-29058026)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:371) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna87-GluCTC(126143157-126143086)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:76.61TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:372) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna31-GluTTC(147986426-147986494)Glu(TTC)69bp Sc:21.27TCCCTGGTAGTCTAGTGGCTAAAGTTTGGCGCTTTCACCGCCGGGACTGGTTGATTCCAG ATCAGGGGA(SEQIDNO:373) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna6-GluTTC(74977554-74977622)Glu(TTC)69bp Sc:23.54GCCTGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGAATTCAGTGTTTTCAGTGCTCTAGTCCAGGTTCAATTCCT GGTCAGGGA(SEQIDNO:374) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna64-GluTTC(170424230-170424162)Glu(TTC)69bp Sc:26.19CCCTGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGAGTTGGTGCTTTCGTCATGACAGCCCAGGTTCAATTCCT GGTTAGAGA(SEQIDNO:375) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna14-GluTTC(31306637-31306567)Glu(TTC)71bp Sc:28.80ACCCTGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAAGACTTTGTGCTTTCATTGCTGCATCCTAGGTTCAATTCC CAGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:376) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna94-GluTTC(147931051-147930979)Glu(TTC)73bp Sc:40.45TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGCGCTTTCACCGCCTGCAGCTCGAGTTCGATT CCTGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:377) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna49-GluTTC(159849132-159849203)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:54.07GCGTTGGTGGTGTAGTGGTGAGCACAGCTGCCTTTCAAGCAGTTAACGCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGGTAACGAA(SEQIDNO:378) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna133-GluTTC(16734432-16734361)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:72.33TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGCGCTTTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:379) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna84-GluTTC(159658578-159658507)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:72.33TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGCGCTTTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:380) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna5-GluTTC(17071665-17071736)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:75.96TCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGCGCTTTCACCGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:381) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna3-GluTTC(44390133-44390062)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:76.26TCCCACATGGTCTAGCGGTTAGGATTCCTGGTTTTCACCCAGGCGGCCCGGGTTCGACTC CCGGTGTGGGAA(SEQIDNO:382) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna11-GluTTC(23878545-23878474)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:76.26TCCCACATGGTCTAGCGGTTAGGATTCCTGGTTTTCACCCAGGCGGCCCGGGTTCGACTC CCGGTGTGGGAA(SEQIDNO:383) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna5-GluTTC(40532945-40532874)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:76.46TCCCATATGGTCTAGCGGTTAGGATTCCTGGTTTTCACCCAGGTGGCCCGGGTTCGACTC CCGGTATGGGAA(SEQIDNO:384) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna20-GluTTC(130811242-130811171)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:76.46TCCCATATGGTCTAGCGGTTAGGATTCCTGGTTTTCACCCAGGTGGCCCGGGTTCGACTC CCGGTATGGGAA(SEQIDNO:385) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna2-GlyCCC(16926367-16926437)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:63.06GCCTTGGTGGTGCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCCCACGTGGGAGACCCGGGTTCAATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:386) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna130-GlyCCC(16877423-16877353)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:69.75GCGTTGGTGGTTTAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCCCATGCGGGAGACCCGGGTTCAATTCC CGGCCACTGCA(SEQIDNO:387) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna13-GlyCCC(19704767-19704837)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:70.13GCATTGGTGGTTCAATGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCCCACGCAGGAGACCCAGGTTCGATTCC TGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:388) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna34-GlyCCC(626807-626737)Gly(CCC)71bpSc: 76.98GCGCCGCTGGTGTAGTGGTATCATGCAAGATTCCCATTCTTGCGACCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGGCGGCGCA(SEQIDNO:389) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna27-GlyCCC(70329697-70329627)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:76.98GCGCCGCTGGTGTAGTGGTATCATGCAAGATTCCCATTCTTGCGACCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGGCGGCGCA(SEQIDNO:390) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna132-GlyCCC(16745091-16745021)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:78.31GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCCCACGCGGGAGACCCGGGTTCAATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:391) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna4-GlyCCC(17061003-17061073)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:78.31GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCCCACGCGGGAGACCCGGGTTCAATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:392) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna82-GlyGCC(142620469-142620539)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:46.73GCATGGGTGATTCAGTGGTAGAATTTTCACCTGCCATGCAGGAGGTCCAGGTTCATTTCC TGGCCTATGCA(SEQIDNO:393) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna18-GlyGCC(69380098-69380168)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:56.35GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCATGCGGGCGGCCGGGCTTCGATTCC TGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:394) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna43-GlyGCC(159716980-159717050)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:69.02GCATAGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTTGCCTGCCACGCAGGAGGCCCAGGTTTGATTCC TGGCCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:395) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna25-GlyGCC(69369685-69369615)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:73.97GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTTGATTCC CGGCCAGTGCA(SEQIDNO:396) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna68-GlyGCC(159760331-159760261)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:81.62GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:397) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna19-GlyGCC(69380911-69380981)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:81.62GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:398) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna24-GlyGCC(69370513-69370443)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:81.62GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:399) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna5-GlyGCC(7969789-7969859)Gly(GCC)71bpSc: 81.62GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:400) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna19-GlyGCC(156965975-156965905)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:81.62GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:401) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna128-GlyGCC(27978735-27978665)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:81.62GCATTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:402) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna35-GlyGCC(159679718-159679788)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:82.15GCATGGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:403) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna37-GlyGCC(159687091-159687161)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:82.15GCATGGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:404) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna39-GlyGCC(159694522-159694592)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:82.15GCATGGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:405) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna41-GlyGCC(159701882-159701952)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:82.15GCATGGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:406) Homo_sapiens_chr21.trna2-GlyGCC(17749048-17748978)Gly(GCC)71bp Sc:82.15GCATGGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTGCCACGCGGGAGGCCCGGGTTCGATTCC CGGCCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:407) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna82-GlyTCC(159676656-159676585)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:55.96GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGTTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGCTCGATTC CCGCCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:408) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna10-GlyTCC(8065591-8065662)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:71.94GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTAAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:409) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna117-GlyTCC(144109292-144109221)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:73.26GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:410) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna45-GlyTCC(159767527-159767598)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:73.26GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:411) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna70-GlyTCC(159706242-159706171)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:73.26GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:412) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna73-GlyTCC(159698861-159698790)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:73.26GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:413) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna76-GlyTCC(159691451-159691380)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:73.26GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:414) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna79-GlyTCC(159684070-159683999)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:73.26GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:415) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna2-GlyTCC(4675082-4675153)Gly(TCC)72bpSc: 76.83GCGTTGGTGGTATAGTGGTTAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAGTTGACCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:416) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna4-HisGTG(149799324-149799253)His(GTG)72bp Sc:22.51GCAGTGACTGTATAGTGGTTAGCACTCTGTGTTGTGGCCACAGCAACCATGGTTCAAATC TGAGTCATGACA(SEQIDNO:417) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna106-HisGTG(147422523-147422452)His(GTG)72bp Sc:61.09GCCATGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGCTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:418) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna111-HisGTG(146241540-146241469)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:419) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna118-HisGTG(144108309-144108238)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:420) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna16-HisGTG(145011397-145011468)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:421) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna21-HisGTG(146220095-146220166)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:422) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna1-HisGTG(43280641-43280712)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:423) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna8-HisGTG(43279974-43279903)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:424) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna9-HisGTG(43278167-43278096)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:425) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna33-HisGTG(27233885-27233956)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:426) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna7-HisGTG(14424009-14423938)His(GTG)72bp Sc:64.63GCCGTGATCGTATAGTGGTTAGTACTCTGCGTTGTGGCCGCAGCAACCTCGGTTCGAATC CGAGTCACGGCA(SEQIDNO:427) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna38-IleAAT(27349718-27349791)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:75.35GGCTGGTTAGTTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGTGGGTTCGAT CCCCATATCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:428) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna57-IleAAT(27744341-27744414)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:76.09GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTCGGCTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:429) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna165-IleAAT(26829273-26829200)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:78.57GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTCAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:430) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna28-IleAAT(26888811-26888884)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:78.57GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTCAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:431) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna163-IleAAT(26853307-26853234)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:79.57GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCTAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACTGGCCA(SEQIDNO:432) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna10-IleAAT(101853182-101853255)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:80.66GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:433) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna9-IleAAT(8031636-8031709)Ile(AAT)74bpSc: 80.66GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:434) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna11-IleAAT(26662329-26662402)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:80.66GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:435) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna154-IleAAT(27313402-27313329)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:80.66GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:436) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna158-IleAAT(27253046-27252973)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:80.66GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:437) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna34-IleAAT(8071107-8071034)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:80.89GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAA CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:438) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna153-IleAAT(27351042-27350969)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:82.10GGCTGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACTGGCCA(SEQIDNO:439) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna59-IleAAT(27763946-27764019)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:83.32GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACTGGCCA(SEQIDNO:440) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna80-IleAAT(58257213-58257286)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:83.55GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGGCGCTAATAACGCCAAGGTCGCGGGTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:441) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna5-IleGAT(3843344-3843271)Ile(GAT)74bpSc: 72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:442) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna6-IleGAT(3804915-3804842)Ile(GAT)74bpSc: 72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:443) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna7-IleGAT(3766491-3766418)Ile(GAT)74bpSc: 72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:444) Homo_sapiens_chrX_random.trna1-IleGAT(118398-118471)Ile(GAT)74bp Sc:72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:445) Homo_sapiens_chrX_random.trna2-IleGAT(406943-407016)Ile(GAT)74bp Sc:72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:446) Homo_sapiens_chrX_random.trna3-IleGAT(465544-465617)Ile(GAT)74bp Sc:72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:447) Homo_sapiens_chrX_random.trna4-IleGAT(399021-398948)Ile(GAT)74bp Sc:72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:448) Homo_sapiens_chrX_random.trna5-IleGAT(86496-86423)Ile(GAT)74bp Sc:72.42GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTAAGAGCGTGGTGCTGATAACACCAAGGTCGCGGGCTCGAC TCCCGCACCGGCCA(SEQIDNO:449) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna29-IleTAT(27096104-27096197)Ile(TAT)94bp Sc:67.58GCTCCAGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGCGGTACTTATATGGCAGTATGTGTGCGAGTGAT GCCGAGGTTGTGAGTTCGAGCCTCACCTGGAGCA(SEQIDNO:450) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna55-IleTAT(27707179-27707272)Ile(TAT)94bp Sc:68.23GCTCCAGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGCGGTACTTATACAACAGTATATGTGCGGGTGAT GCCGAGGTTGTGAGTTCGAGCCTCACCTGGAGCA(SEQIDNO:451) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna63-IleTAT(28613346-28613439)Ile(TAT)94bp Sc:65.86GCTCCAGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGCGGTACTTATAAGACAGTGCACCTGTGAGCAAT GCCGAGGTTGTGAGTTCAAGCCTCACCTGGAGCA(SEQIDNO:452) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna5-IleTAT(42891180-42891272)Ile(TAT)93bp Sc:68.11GCTCCAGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGCGGTACTTATACAGCAGTACATGCAGAGCAATG CCGAGGTTGTGAGTTCGAGCCTCACCTGGAGCA(SEQIDNO:453) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna10-IleTAT(44594740-44594648)Ile(TAT)93bp Sc:68.39GCTCCAGTGGCGCAATCGGTTAGCGCGCGGTACTTATATGACAGTGCGAGCGGAGCAATG CCGAGGTTGTGAGTTCGATCCTCACCTGGAGCA(SEQIDNO:454) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna5-LeuAAG(149703999-149703918)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:20.79GGTAGCATGGCTGAGTGGTCTAAGATTCTGAATTAAGTCTCCAGTCTCTTTGGGGGCGTG GTTTTCAATCCCACCGCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:455) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna6-LeuAAG(48385830-48385749)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:40.72GGTAGGGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCACTGTATTAAGACTCCAGTCTCTTCAGAGGCATG GGTTTGAATCCCACTGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:456) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna4-LeuAAG(30131072-30131144)Leu(AAG)73bp Sc:46.12GGGCCAGTGGCTCAATGGATAATGCGTCTGACTAAGAATCAGAAGATTCCAGCCTTGACT CCTGGCTGGCTCA(SEQIDNO:457) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna126-LeuAAG(28554460-28554379)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:59.09GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGACGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTTGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:458) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna78-LeuAAG(29064758-29064839)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:68.10GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTCAAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:459) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna1-LeuAAG(20148131-20148212)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:69.84GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:460) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna16-LeuAAG(22215962-22216043)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:69.84GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:461) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna7-LeuAAG(180547307-180547388)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:69.84GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:462) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna98-LeuAAG(29019459-29019378)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:69.84GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:463) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna16-LeuAAG(180533731-180533650)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:71.96GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGAGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:464) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna19-LeuAAG(180457161-180457080)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:71.96GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGAGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:465) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna3-LeuAAG(180461446-180461527)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:71.96GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTAAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGAGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:466) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna66-LeuCAA(159848443-159848360)Leu(CAA)84bp Sc:59.01GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCAGTCTTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAAATCGCACCCTCCGCTGGAGGCG TGGGTTCGAATCCCACTTTTGACA(SEQIDNO:467) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna1-LeuCAA(9253366-9253439)Leu(CAA)74bpSc: 60.99GCCTCCTTAGTGCAGTAGGTAGCGCATCAGTCTCAAAATCTGAATGGTCCTGAGTTCAAG CCTCAGAGGGGGCA(SEQIDNO:468) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna58-LeuCAA(247134677-247134782)Leu(CAA)106bp Sc:65.69GTCAGGATGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGGCGCCAGACTCAAGGTAAGCACCTTGCCTGCGGGCT TTCTGGTCTCCGGATGGAGGCGTGGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:469) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna141-LeuCAA(27678433-27678327)Leu(CAA)107bp Sc:68.19GTCAGGATGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGGCGCCAGACTCAAGTTGCTACTTCCCAGGTTTGGGG CTTCTGGTCTCCGCATGGAGGCGTGGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:470) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna140-LeuCAA(27681503-27681396)Leu(CAA)108bp Sc:68.53GTCAGGATGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGGCGCCAGACTCAAGCTTACTGCTTCCTGTGTTCGGG TCTTCTGGTCTCCGTATGGAGGCGTGGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:471) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna100-LeuCAA(28972084-28971979)Leu(CAA)106bp Sc:68.23GTCAGGATGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGGCGCCAGACTCAAGCTAAGCTTCCTCCGCGGTGGGG ATTCTGGTCTCCAATGGAGGCGTGGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:472) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna74-LeuCAA(29016809-29016913)Leu(CAA)105bp Sc:69.73GTCAGGATGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGGCGCCAGACTCAAGCTTGGCTTCCTCGTGTTGAGGA TTCTGGTCTCCAATGGAGGCGTGGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:473) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna20-LeuCAG(159324696-159324619)Leu(CAG)78bp Sc:20.45GGCAGTGGAGTTTAGTGGTTAAGGACCTGCTCAGACATCACAGGTAGGTAGATCTGGGTT CAAACCCTAGCCCTGGCA(SEQIDNO:474) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna17-LeuCAG(55891364-55891446)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:75.90GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:475) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna26-LeuCAG(55891975-55891893)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:75.90GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTTCTGACA(SEQIDNO:476) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna34-LeuCAG(159677947-159678029)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:477) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna36-LeuCAG(159685365-159685447)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:478) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna38-LeuCAG(159692746-159692828)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:479) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna40-LeuCAG(159700156-159700238)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:480) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna42-LeuCAG(159707537-159707619)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:481) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna67-LeuCAG(159766838-159766756)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:482) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna7-LeuCAG(26629415-26629497)Leu(CAG)83bp Sc:77.22GTCAGGATGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGCGTTCAGGTCGCAGTCTCCCCTGGAGGCGT GGGTTCGAATCCCACTCCTGACA(SEQIDNO:483) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna2-LeuTAA(55224554-55224480)Leu(TAA)75bp Sc:28.07GTTAAGATGGCAGAGCCCGGCAATTGCATAAGACTTAAAACTTTATAATCAGAGGTTCAA CTCCTCTCATTAACA(SEQIDNO:484) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna81-LeuTAA(69971099-69971181)Leu(TAA)83bp Sc:34.00ACTCATTTGGCTGAGTGGTTAAGGCATTGGACTTAAGATCCAATGGAGTAGTGGCTGTGT GGGTTTAAACCCCACTACTGGTA(SEQIDNO:485) Homo_sapiens_chr4.trna2-LeuTAA(156604502-156604428)Leu(TAA)75bp Sc:48.70GTTAAGATGGCAGAGCCTGGTAATTGCATAAAACTTAAAATTTTATAATCAGAGGTTCAA CTCCTCTTCTTAACA(SEQIDNO:486) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna155-LeuTAA(27306395-27306313)Leu(TAA)83bp Sc:74.34ACCGGGATGGCTGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTTAAGATCCAATGGACAGGTGTCCGCGT GGGTTCGAGCCCCACTCCCGGTA(SEQIDNO:487) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna4-LeuTAA(59075804-59075886)Leu(TAA)83bp Sc:79.52ACCAGAATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTTAAGATCCAATGGATTCATATCCGCGT GGGTTCGAACCCCACTTCTGGTA(SEQIDNO:488) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna134-LeuTAA(27796959-27796877)Leu(TAA)83bp Sc:80.48ACCGGGATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTTAAGATCCAATGGGCTGGTGCCCGCGT GGGTTCGAACCCCACTCTCGGTA(SEQIDNO:489) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna83-LeuTAA(144579377-144579459)Leu(TAA)83bp Sc:80.77ACCAGGATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTTAAGATCCAATGGACATATGTCCGCGT GGGTTCGAACCCCACTCCTGGTA(SEQIDNO:490) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna27-LeuTAG(22114614-22114533)Leu(TAG)82bp Sc:68.14GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGTGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTTAGGCTCCAGTCATTTCGATGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:491) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna2-LeuTAG(20163369-20163450)Leu(TAG)82bp Sc:68.82GGTAGTGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTTAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGGGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCACTGCCA(SEQIDNO:492) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna42-LeuTAG(7964438-7964357)Leu(TAG)82bp Sc:72.19GGTAGCGTGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCGCTGGATTTAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTCGGAGGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCGCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:493) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna2-LysCTT(51216476-51216548)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:40.00AACCGAATAGCTTAGTTGATGAAGCGTGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTAGTGGGTTCAAGC CCCACATTGGACA(SEQIDNO:494) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna6-LysCTT(57117280-57117208)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:51.97CTGCAGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCATGGGTTCGTGC CCCATGTTGGGTG(SEQIDNO:495) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna5-LysCTT(40758590-40758662)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:52.67GCCCAGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATAAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTTGTGGATTCGTGC CCCATGCTGGGTG(SEQIDNO:496) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna24-LysCTT(26234368-26234296)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:53.34GCCCGACTACCTCAGTCGGTGGAGCATGGGACTCTTCATCCCAGGGTTGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACATTGGGCA(SEQIDNO:497) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna5-LysCTT(3154940-3155012)Lys(CTT)73bpSc: 54.80GCCTGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGCAAAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGCTCGAGC TCCATGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:498) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna127-LysCTT(55196202-55196130)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:58.75GCCCAGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCATGGGTTTGAGC CCCACGTTTGGTG(SEQIDNO:499) Homo_sapiens_chr18.trna4-LysCTT(41923341-41923269)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:60.42GACGAGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGGGACTCTTAATCCCAGGGTCGTGGGTTTGAGC CCCATGTTGGGCA(SEQIDNO:500) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna30-LysCTT(3170628-3170556)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:64.91GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGATAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CGCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:501) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna10-LysCTT(3181502-3181574)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:74.61GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGGGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:502) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna32-LysCTT(3147479-3147407)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:76.19GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACCCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:503) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna119-LysCTT(144106951-144106879)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:80.47GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:504) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna7-LysCTT(3165693-3165765)Lys(CTT)73bpSc: 80.47GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:505) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna11-LysCTT(180581657-180581585)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:80.47GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:506) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna9-LysCTT(180567361-180567433)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:80.47GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:507) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna13-LysCTT(26664753-26664825)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:80.47GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:508) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna13-LysCTT(57776438-57776366)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:80.72GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGGGACTCTTAATCCCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:509) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna2-LysCTT(76939959-76940031)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:80.72GCCCGGCTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATGGGACTCTTAATCCCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCGAGC CCCACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:510) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna3-LysTTT(19713207-19713277)Lys(TTT)71bp Sc:28.27ACCCTGTGGTACAGGGGCTAATATGCTGGGCCTTTACCACTTCAGCCCAGGTTCGATTCC TGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:511) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna7-LysTTT(54729817-54729745)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:48.15ACCTGGGTAGCTTAGTTGGTAGAGCATTGGACTTTTAATTTGAGGGCCCAGGTTTCAAGT CCCTGTTTGGGTG(SEQIDNO:512) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna1-LysTTT(27734573-27734645)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:49.92ACCCAGATAGCTCAGTCAGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAAGGTTCATGT CCCTTTTTGGGTG(SEQIDNO:513) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna53-LysTTT(27651825-27651897)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:59.40ACCTGGGTAGCTCAGTAGGTAGAACATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCTAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTCCAGGCG(SEQIDNO:514) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna55-LysTTT(203709894-203709966)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:62.89GCCCGGAGAGCTCAGTGGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCTCGTTCGGGCA(SEQIDNO:515) Homo_sapiens_chr7random.trna1-LysTTT(397621-397697)Lys(TTT)77bp Sc:68.40GCCCACGTAGCTCAATGGTCAGAGCGTGCGGCTTTTAACCGCAAGGAAGGCTGCGAGTTC GACCCTCGCCGTGGGCT(SEQIDNO:516) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna71-LysTTT(28823500-28823572)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:72.00GCCTGGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAACATCAGACTTTTAATCTGACGGTGCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCAGGCG(SEQIDNO:517) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna149-LysTTT(27410820-27410748)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:81.41GCCTGGGTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTCCAGGCG(SEQIDNO:518) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna5-LysTTT(59080478-59080550)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:82.14GCCCGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCGGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCGGGCG(SEQIDNO:519) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna143-LysTTT(27667644-27667572)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:83.31GCCTGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCAGGCG(SEQIDNO:520) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna54-LysTTT(202742278-202742350)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:83.80GCCCGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCGGGCG(SEQIDNO:521) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna62-LysTTT(202742853-202742781)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:83.80GCCCGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCGGGCG(SEQIDNO:522) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna14-LysTTT(59084456-59084384)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:83.80GCCCGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCGGGCG(SEQIDNO:523) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna2-LysTTT(7963198-7963270)Lys(TTT)73bpSc: 83.80GCCCGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCGGGCG(SEQIDNO:524) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna76-LysTTT(29026785-29026857)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:83.80GCCCGGATAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCGGGCG(SEQIDNO:525) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna11-LysTTT(121935865-121935937)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:83.96GCCTGGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCAGGCG(SEQIDNO:526) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna23-LysTTT(72069789-72069717)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:84.43GCCTGGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGT CCCTGTTCAGGCA(SEQIDNO:527) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna1-MetCAT(19393996-19394070)Met(CAT)75bp Sc:43.49AGCAGAGTGGTGCAGTGGAAGCATACCTATGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTTGATGGATGGA AACCATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:528) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna61-MetCAT(27853643-27853714)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:62.43AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCTAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:529) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna92-MetCAT(58276523-58276451)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:64.33GCCCTCTTAGTGCAGCTGGCAGCGCGTCAGTTTCATAATCTGAAAGTCCTGAGTTCAAGC CTCAGAGAGGGCA(SEQIDNO:530) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna32-MetCAT(151910350-151910421)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:531) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna20-MetCAT(78045957-78045886)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:532) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna129-MetCAT(27978321-27978250)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:533) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna142-MetCAT(27668650-27668579)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:534) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna150-MetCAT(27408814-27408743)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:535) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna169-MetCAT(26438579-26438508)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:536) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna171-MetCAT(26421402-26421331)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:537) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna2-MetCAT(26394733-26394804)Met(CAT)72bp Sc:68.98AGCAGAGTGGCGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCATAACCCAGAGGTCGATGGATCGAAAC CATCCTCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:538) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna22-MetCAT(85975201-85975129)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:74.51GCCTCGTTAGCGCAGTAGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCGTGAGTTCGAGC CTCACACGGGGCA(SEQIDNO:539) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna21-MetCAT(26809691-26809763)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:75.06GCCCTCTTAGCGCAGCTGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCAAGC CTCAGAGAGGGCA(SEQIDNO:540) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna162-MetCAT(26866601-26866529)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:75.76GCCCTCTTAGCGCAGCGGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCGAGC CTCAGAGAGGGCA(SEQIDNO:541) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna164-MetCAT(26843625-26843553)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:75.76GCCCTCTTAGCGCAGCGGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCGAGC CTCAGAGAGGGCA(SEQIDNO:542) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna27-MetCAT(26874423-26874495)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:75.76GCCCTCTTAGCGCAGCGGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCGAGC CTCAGAGAGGGCA(SEQIDNO:543) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna75-MetCAT(29020331-29020403)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:76.58GCCTCCTTAGCGCAGTAGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCGAAC CTCAGAGGGGGCA(SEQIDNO:544) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna97-MetCAT(29029093-29029021)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:76.58GCCTCCTTAGCGCAGTAGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCGAAC CTCAGAGGGGGCA(SEQIDNO:545) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna20-MetCAT(70017897-70017969)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:78.21GCCCTCTTAGCGCAGTGGGCAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCCTGAGTTCGAGC CTCAGAGAGGGCA(SEQIDNO:546) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna10-MetCAT(124238723-124238651)Met(CAT)73bp Sc:79.85GCCTCGTTAGCGCAGTAGGTAGCGCGTCAGTCTCATAATCTGAAGGTCGTGAGTTCGATC CTCACACGGGGCA(SEQIDNO:547) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna56-PheGAA(27740524-27740599)Phe(GAA)76bp Sc:53.54GCCGAAATAGCTCAATTGGGAGAGTGTTAGACTGAAGATCTTCTGCAGGTCTCTGGTTCA ATTCCGGGTTTCGACA(SEQIDNO:548) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna112-PheGAA(28839426-28839353)Phe(GAA)74bp Sc:56.32GCTGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTTAAAGTTCCCTGGTTCAAC CCTGGGTTTCAGCC(SEQIDNO:549) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna72-PheGAA(28840143-28840215)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:59.98GCCAAAATTGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCACCA(SEQIDNO:550) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna103-PheGAA(28899145-28899072)Phe(GAA)74bp Sc:67.94GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACCGAAGATCTTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAT CCCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:551) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna106-PheGAA(28883661-28883589)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:82.13GCCGAGATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCAATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:552) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna13-PheGAA(59090501-59090429)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:82.45GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCAATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:553) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna15-PheGAA(59081618-59081546)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:84.19GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:554) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna11-PheGAA(123978414-123978342)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:84.19GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:555) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna1-PheGAA(93999977-93999905)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:84.19GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:556) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna14-PheGAA(1334433-1334361)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:84.19GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:557) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna109-PheGAA(28866550-28866478)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:84.19GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:558) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna96-PheGAA(29057500-29057428)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:84.19GCCGAAATAGCTCAGTTGGGAGAGCGTTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGATC CCGGGTTTCGGCA(SEQIDNO:559) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna65-ProAGG(165951420-165951349)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:560) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna9-ProAGG(75624205-75624276)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:561) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna22-ProAGG(20151471-20151400)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:562) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna23-ProAGG(20147406-20147335)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:563) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna29-ProAGG(3172707-3172636)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:564) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna9-ProAGG(3179635-3179706)Pro(AGG)72bpSc: 75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:565) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna12-ProAGG(26663477-26663548)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:566) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna2-ProAGG(128210740-128210811)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:75.92GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:567) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna11-ProAGG(3181990-3182061)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:77.31GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTAGGATGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:568) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna4-ProAGG(3150387-3150481)Pro(AGG)95bpSc: 43.10GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTGTGGTTCTCGCTTAGGGACCACAGGGACAAGCCCGGGAGAC CCAAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATCCCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:569) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna30-ProCGG(27167500-27167571)Pro(CGG)72bp Sc:71.93GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTCGGGTGTGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:570) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna52-ProCGG(165950586-165950657)Pro(CGG)72bp Sc:76.52GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTCGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:571) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna6-ProCGG(3162050-3162121)Pro(CGG)72bpSc: 76.52GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTCGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:572) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna37-ProCGG(8066947-8066876)Pro(CGG)72bp Sc:76.52GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTCGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:573) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna6-ProTGG(20222015-20222086)Pro(TGG)72bp Sc:76.15GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:574) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna28-ProTGG(3174205-3174134)Pro(TGG)72bp Sc:76.15GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:575) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna3-ProTGG(3148924-3148995)Pro(TGG)72bpSc: 76.15GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:576) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna8-ProTGG(3178095-3178166)Pro(TGG)72bpSc: 76.15GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:577) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna14-ProTGG(180548531-180548460)Pro(TGG)72bp Sc:76.15GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:578) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna12-ProTGG(75624588-75624517)Pro(TGG)72bp Sc:76.24GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATTCTCGGTTTGGGTCCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:579) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna3-ProTGG(20171005-20171076)Pro(TGG)72bp Sc:79.61GGCTCGTTGGTCTAGTGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGTCCCGGGTTCAAATC CCGGACGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:580) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna17-LeuAAG(180524251-180524170)Leu(AAG)82bp Sc:25.68GATAGCAAGGCCGAGCGGTCTAAGGCTCCGGATTAAGGCGCCGGTGTCTTCGGAGGCATG GGTTCGAATTCCACCTCTGCCA(SEQIDNO:581) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna5-IleAAT(50651822-50651745)Ile(AAT)78bp Sc:23.04GACCAATTAGCAAGCACAGTTGGCTAGAACATGGTGCTAATAAGGCCACGGTCAGGGGTT CAATTCCCTTATGGGCTG(SEQIDNO:582) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna9-IleAAT(128282151-128282225)Ile(AAT)75bp Sc:27.18TGGCTGATGAGCTCAGCTGGTGGGAGCATGGTGTTAATGAGGCTGAGGTCGTGGGTTCAA TCCCCACCGGGCTAT(SEQIDNO:583) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna39-IleAAT(27359843-27359916)Ile(AAT)74bp Sc:44.67GGCCGGTTAACTTAATTGGTTAGAGCGTGGTGCTAATAATGTCAAGGTTGCGGGTTGGAT CCCCGAACGGGCCA(SEQIDNO:584) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna1-CysACA(151968789-151968964)Cys(ACA)176bp Sc:29.48GGCTGTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTGACTACAGAATCCTATACTCAGGGGAAGGAGA ACTGGGGGTTTCTCAGTGGGTCAAAGGACTTGTAGTGGTAAATCAAAAGCAACTCTATAA GCTATGTAACAAACTTTAAAGTCATATGTAGCTGGGTTCAAATCCTGTTTCTGCCA(SEQIDNO: 585) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna41-SerACT(27369650-27369723)Ser(ACT)74bp Sc:49.68GGCCGGTTAGCTCAGTTGGTTAGAGCGTGCTGCTACTAATGCCAGGGTCGAGGTTTCGAT CCCCGTACGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:586) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna2-SerAGA(29552364-29552435)Ser(AGA)72bp Sc:20.36GGTAATGTAGCCTCGTGGTTAGGGGCTGCATTCTAGAGCTATGCTGCCCAGGTTCAAATT CTGGTGCCACTC(SEQIDNO:587) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna111-AlaAGC(28854594-28854523)Ala(AGC)72bp Sc:32.22GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGACAGAGCACGTGGTTAGCATGCGTGAGGTCCTGCGTTCAACTT CCAGTATTTCCA(SEQIDNO:588) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna33-ProAGG(3142681-3142610)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:23.16CGCTCTTTGGTCTAGGGGTATGATCTTCGCTTAGGGTGCGAGAGGTGCCTGGATCAACTC CTTCACAAGCCG(SEQIDNO:589) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna7-ProAGG(77749101-77749171)Pro(AGG)71bp Sc:30.29GGCTGGTTGGTCTAGGGCTATGATTCTCACTTAGGGTGCAAGAGGTCCTGGTTCAAATCC CAGAGGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:590) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna8-ProAGG(87193084-87193155)Pro(AGG)72bp Sc:37.07GGCTGGTTGGTCTAGGGCTATGATTCTCACTTAGGGTGCAAAAGGTCCTGGGTTCAAATC CCAGAGGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:591) Homo_sapiens_chr10.trna3-LeuCAA(34631489-34631422)Leu(CAA)68bp Sc:20.90CATAGGGTAGTGGCTAAGAACCTAAACTCTAAATTTAGATGTCCTGAGTTCAAATCCCAG CTGTATGC(SEQIDNO:592) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna3-ValCAC(43384415-43384487)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:29.18GCTTCTGTAATGTAGTGGTTATCACATTCGCCTCACACATGAAAGGTCACCAGTTTGAGA CCGGGCCAAAACA(SEQIDNO:593) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna1-ValCAC(16924648-16924720)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:30.83GTTTCTGTAGTATAGTGGTTATCATGTTTGCCTCACATGTGAAAGACCCTTGGCTCGAGA CTGGAGGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:594) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna131-ValCAC(16746819-16746747)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:41.96GTTTCTGTGGTGTAGTGGTTATTATGTTCGCTTCACATATGAAAGGTCTCTGGTTCGAGA CTGCGTGGGAACA(SEQIDNO:595) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna3-ValCAC(17059280-17059352)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:41.96GTTTCTGTGGTGTAGTGGTTATTATGTTCGCTTCACATATGAAAGGTCTCTGGTTCGAGA CTGCGTGGGAACA(SEQIDNO:596) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna1-GlyCCC(11609278-11609349)Gly(CCC)72bp Sc:43.42TACTCAGTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCAGCGCTCCCACCGCCGCAGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCATGGAA(SEQIDNO:597) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna91-GlyCCC(147946904-147946834)Gly(CCC)71bp Sc:49.64GCACTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCCCACGCGGGAGACCCGGGTTTAATTCC CGGTCAAGATA(SEQIDNO:598) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna7-ArgCCT(63418343-63418411)Arg(CCT)69bp Sc:21.47GCATTCGTAGTTCAGCGGCAGAAATTTCGTCTCCTACGCGGGAGACTCGGGTTCGACTTC GGCCATGCA(SEQIDNO:599) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna88-ArgCCT(147994965-147994895)Arg(CCT)71bp Sc:21.62GGATTTGTGGTCCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCACCGCCTGCATAGGAGACCCTGGTTTAATTCC TGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:600) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna96-ArgCCT(147609775-147609705)Arg(CCT)71bp Sc:27.53GGATTGGTGGTCCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCACCGCCTGCATAGGAGACCCTGGTTTAATTCC TGGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:601) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna14-ArgCCT(144652936-144653006)Arg(CCT)71bp Sc:34.62GCATTGGTAGTTCAGCGGTGGCATTCTCCCCACCTACGCGGGAGACCTGGGTTCAACTCC CGGCCAAAGCA(SEQIDNO:602) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna18-ArgCCT(145949915-145949985)Arg(CCT)71bp Sc:34.62GCATTGGTAGTTCAGCGGTGGCATTCTCCCCACCTACGCGGGAGACCTGGGTTCAACTCC CGGCCAAAGCA(SEQIDNO:603) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna11-SupCTA(77770663-77770591)Sup(CTA)73bp Sc:26.26GGCGGGATAATGTAGTGGTTAAAGGCATGGGCTCTAGAGCCAGACTTCCTGGGTTCAAAT CTCAGACCTGCTA(SEQIDNO:604) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna1-SupCTA(13808887-13808954)Sup(CTA)68bp Sc:26.42GGCAGGGTAGGGTAGAGGTTAAAACCATGGATTCTAGAGCCAGATGGGTTCAAATCCCGG CTCTGCCG(SEQIDNO:605) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna3-GluCTC(51322923-51322852)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:20.35TCCCTGGTGTTCCGGTGGTTAGGATTTGGCATTCTCACTGTTGTGGTGCGGATTCAATCC TGGCTTAGGGTA(SEQIDNO:606) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna14-GluCTC(112871000-112870928)Glu(CTC)73bp Sc:22.05CCGTGGATAGCCCAGCGGCTATGGGAGCCGGGCTCTCACTCTGACGTCCTGGGTTCAAGT CCCAGTGTGCACA(SEQIDNO:607) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna25-GluCTC(71127068-71126996)Glu(CTC)73bp Sc:22.62CCCCTGGCGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCATCCACCGCGGCCTGGGTTCGACT CGTGGTCAGAGTG(SEQIDNO:608) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna7-GluCTC(70234894-70234968)Glu(CTC)75bp Sc:22.64CTCTGGTGGTTTAGTGGCTAGGATTCACCTCTCTCACTGCTGCAGCCCAGGGTTCCATTC CCTGGGAGTCAGATG(SEQIDNO:609) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna24-GluCTC(95580992-95580921)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:23.39CCCCTTGTAGTCTAGTGGTTAGAATTCTGCGGTCTCACAGCCGCGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCATTCCGGGAA(SEQIDNO:610) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna10-GluCTC(105362285-105362214)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:25.40TTATTATTATACCTGTGGTTAGGATTCGGCGCTCTCACCGCCACGACCCGGGTTCAATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:611) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna1-GluCTC(11830789-11830860)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:26.22CCCCTGGTAGTCTAGTGGTTAGGCTTTGCCGCTCTCAGTGCCGCTGCCTGGGTTGGATTC CCAGTCATGTGA(SEQIDNO:612) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna7-GluCTC(13918541-13918470)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:27.08TCCCTGCTTGTCTAGTGGTTAGAATTCAGCACTCTCACTGCCACAGCCCAGGTTCAATTC CCTGTCAGAGAA(SEQIDNO:613) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna12-GluCTC(150927523-150927595)Glu(CTC)73bp Sc:29.78TTCCCCTTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTCAACACTCTCACCGCCGCAGCCCGGGTTTGATTC CCAGGCAGGGAAG(SEQIDNO:614) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna18-GluCTC(159446488-159446417)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:31.33CCCCTGGTGGTCTAGTGCTTAGGATTTGGCACTCTCGCCACCGCAGCCTGCGTTCAATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:615) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna2-GluCTC(57356622-57356551)Glu(CTC)72bp Sc:34.44TCCCTGGTGGTCTAATGGTTAGGAGTCGGCACTCTCACCGCCGCGGCTGGGGTTTGATTC CCAGTCATGTAA(SEQIDNO:616) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna15-GlnCTG(219199376-219199451)Gln(CTG)76bp Sc:22.40GTGAGACTGCACAGCCCAGTGGTGCAGGGCATGGCTCTGACACCTGGCGGCCTGGGTTCA AATCCCAGCTTCTACA(SEQIDNO:617) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna128-GlnCTG(17053558-17053487)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:25.51GGTTCCATGATGTAATGGTGAGCGCTTTGGACTCTGAGTACGGTGATCAGCGTTCAAGTC TCAGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:618) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna21-GlnCTG(151228338-151228267)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:25.76GGTAGTGTAGTCTACTGGTTAAACGCTTGGGCTCTGACATTAACGTCCTGGGTTCAAATC CCAGCTTTGTCA(SEQIDNO:619) Homo_sapiens_chr10.trna5-GlnCTG(20076688-20076614)Gln(CTG)75bp Sc:26.31CTAGGACGTGGTGTAATAGGTAGCACAGAGAATTCTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATT CCTATAGAACCTAGG(SEQIDNO:620) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna27-GlnCTG(147345988-147346059)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:39.31GGTTCCATGGTGTAATGGTGAGGGCTTTGGACTCTGACTACAGTGATCAGAGTTCAAGTC TCAGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:621) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna23-GlnCTG(146292313-146292384)Gln(CTG)72bp Sc:43.68GGTTCCATGGGTTAATGGTGAGCACCCTGGACTCTGAATCAAGCGATCCGAGTTCAAATC TCGGTGGTACCT(SEQIDNO:622) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna6-LysCTT(74461893-74461820)Lys(CTT)74bp Sc:37.12GCCTGGCTACCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCATGGGACTCTTAATCCCAGAGTCAGTGGGTTCAAG CCTCACATTGAGTG(SEQIDNO:623) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna13-LysCTT(3186154-3186226)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:41.66GCCCAGCTAGCTCAGCCGGTAGAGCACAAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTTGAGC CCTGTGTTGAGCA(SEQIDNO:624) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna51-LysCTT(163832774-163832846)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:42.42GTCTAGCTAGATCAGTTGGTAGAGCATAAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCATGGGTTTGAGC CCTACGTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:625) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna8-LysCTT(39742782-39742854)Lys(CTT)73bp Sc:46.90ACCAGCATGTCTCAGTCGGTATAGTGTGAGACTCTTAATCTCAGGGTCGTGGGTTCAAGC CCCACATTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:626) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna9-PheGAA(124339978-124339906)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:20.84GCCAAAATAGCTCAGCTGGGAGAGTATTAGGTTGAAGATACAAAGTTCCTTGGCTCAATC CAGAGTTTGGGGG(SEQIDNO:627) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna116-PheGAA(28802906-28802834)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:27.39GCTGAGATAGCTCGGTTGGGAGGGCATCAGCCTGAAGATCTAAAGGAGACTGGTTCAATT CTGGGTTTTGGCA(SEQIDNO:628) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna92-PheGAA(147939600-147939529)Phe(GAA)72bp Sc:32.31TGCATGGTTGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGTGCTGAAAGCGTCACGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:629) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna100-PheGAA(147554054-147553983)Phe(GAA)72bp Sc:32.35TGCATGGTTGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGTGCTGAAAGAGCCACGGCCCGGGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:630) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna88-PheGAA(79724801-79724729)Phe(GAA)73bp Sc:43.56GCCAAAATAGCTCAGCTGGGAGAGCATTAGACTGAAGATCTAAAGGTCTCTGGTTTGATC CTGGGTTTCAGAA(SEQIDNO:631) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna12-CysGCA(17716468-17716396)Cys(GCA)73bp Sc:36.14GGGGGTATATCTCAGGGGGCAGAGCATTTGACTGCAGATCAAGAGGTCCCCGGTTGAAAT CCGGGTGCTGGAT(SEQIDNO:632) Homo_sapiens_chr10.trna1-ProGGG(22892585-22892657)Pro(GGG)73bp Sc:34.81GGCAGTGTGGCATAGTGGTTAGAAATGTGCGCTCTGGGGCTGCTGATCCCAGGCTCAAAC CCTGGCGCTGTCA(SEQIDNO:633) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna5-TyrGTA(90055378-90055306)Tyr(GTA)73bp Sc:24.21GTCAGTGTTGCACAACGGTTAAGTGAAGAGGCTGTAAACCCAGACTGGATGGGTTCAATT CCCATCTCTGCCG(SEQIDNO:634) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna24-TyrGTA(148684753-148684678)Tyr(GTA)76bp Sc:33.50TCAATTATAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCATTTAACTGTAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGATCAACTC TGGGTGCCCCCTTTAA(SEQIDNO:635) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna44-AspGTC(159759559-159759630)Asp(GTC)72bp Sc:27.96TCCTTGTTACTATAGTGGTGAGTATCTCTGCCTGTCATGCGTGAGAGAGGGGGTCGATTC CCCGACGGGGAG(SEQIDNO:636) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna109-AsnGTT(146317757-146317684)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:34.29GTCTCTGTGGCACAATCGGTTAGCTTGTTCGGCTGTTAATCTAGAGGTTGGTGGTTAGAG CCCACTGAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:637) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna104-AsnGTT(147478645-147478572)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:41.72GTCTCTGTGGCACAATCGGTTAGAGCGTTCGGCTGTTAATCTAAAGGTTGGTGGCTAGAA CCCACTGAGGGACG(SEQIDNO:638) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna124-AsnGTT(142455154-142455081)Asn(GTT)74bp Sc:43.05GTCTCTGTGGCACAATCGGTTAGCGCGTTCGGCTGTTAATCTAGAGGTTGGTGGTTAGAG CCCACTGAGGGATG(SEQIDNO:639) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna13-LeuTAA(47859277-47859203)Leu(TAA)75bp Sc:20.57GTTAAGATGGCATAGCCCAGCAATTGCATAAAACTTAAGACTTTATAATTAGAAGTTCAA CACCTCTTCTTAACA(SEQIDNO:640) Homo_sapiens_chr20.trna4-LeuTAA(55366909-55366835)Leu(TAA)75bp Sc:25.92GTTAAGATGGCAGAGCCCAGCGATTGCATAAAACTTAACACTTTATAATCAGAGGTTCAA CTCCTCTTCTTAACA(SEQIDNO:641) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna60-LeuTAA(236173653-236173579)Leu(TAA)75bp Sc:29.87GTTAAGATGGCAGAGCCCAGCAATTGCATAAAACTTAAAACTTTACAATCAGAGGTTCAA CTCCTCTTCTTAACA(SEQIDNO:642) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna9-LeuTAA(117497887-117497961)Leu(TAA)75bp Sc:34.06GTTAAGATGGCAGAGCCCAGCAATTGCATAAATCTTAAAACTTTATAATCAGAGGTTCGA CTCCTCTTCTTAACA(SEQIDNO:643) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna86-ValTAC(156910812-156910738)Val(TAC)75bp Sc:31.66GTTAAGACGGCAGAGCCCGGCAATTGCGTAAAATTTACAACTTTATGGGCAGAGGTTCAA TTCCTCTTCTTAACA(SEQIDNO:644) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna15-LeuTAG(20215099-20215018)Leu(TAG)82bp Sc:32.18GGTAGTGTGGTTGAATGGTCTAAGGCACTGAATTTAGGCTCCAGTCTCTTTGGGGACGTG GGTTTAAATCCCACTGCTGCAA(SEQIDNO:645) Homo_sapiens_chr18.trna3-GlyTCC(53497175-53497246)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:32.27GTGTTGATGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAATTGACCCGACTTCAATTC CCAGCCAACGCA(SEQIDNO:646) Homo_sapiens_chr18.trna2-GlyTCC(53496852-53496923)Gly(TCC)72bp Sc:33.06GTGTTGATGGTATAGTGGTGAGCATAGCTGCCTTCCAAGCAATTGACCCGACTTCGATTC CCAGCCAATGCA(SEQIDNO:647) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna32-SerTGA(21952374-21952306)Ser(TGA)69bp Sc:23.94GAAAAAGTCATAGGGGTTATGAGGCTGGCTTGAAACCAGCCTTAGGAGGTTCAATTCCTT CCTTTTTTG(SEQIDNO:648) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna10-SerTGA(131856612-131856681)Ser(TGA)70bp Sc:27.03GAGAAGGTCATAGAGGTTATGGGATTGGCTTGAAACCAGTCTCTGGGGGGTTCGATTCCC TCCTTTTTCA(SEQIDNO:649) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna6-AlaTGC(60520084-60520153)Ala(TGC)70bp Sc:20.74GGGGGAGTGGTGTGGTTACGAATGTGGCCTCTGCAAGCAGACAGCCTGGGTTCAATTCCC AGCTTGGCCA(SEQIDNO:650) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna122-AlaTGC(28709909-28709838)Ala(TGC)72bp Sc:42.75GTGGATGTAGTTTAGTGGTAGAACGCGCGCTTTGCATGTATGAGGTCCCGGTTTCGATCC CTGGCGTTTCCA(SEQIDNO:651) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna61-ProTGG(205244853-205244777)Pro(TGG)77bp Sc:23.61GCCAGGAGAGCTCAGTGGTGATGGGATGAGATCTGGACTCACACCTCTAGGCCTGGGTTC AAATCCCAGGTCTAGCG(SEQIDNO:652) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna57-ProTGG(236172485-236172556)Pro(TGG)72bp Sc:33.27TAGGACTTGGTGTAATAGGTAGCACGAAGAGATTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCTGG(SEQIDNO:653) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna31-ProTGG(3161032-3160962)Pro(TGG)71bp Sc:37.53GGCCTGTTGGTCTAGAGGTATGATTCTCGCTTTGGGTGCGAGAGGCCCCGGTGCGAGTCC CAGAGGAGCCC(SEQIDNO:654) Homo_sapiens_chr4.trna5-SupTTA(7376810-7376739)Sup(TTA)72bpSc: 21.73GGCAGCCTGGCTTAGTGGAAAGGGAATAGGCTTTAGAGCCAGACTGCCTGGGTTTGAATC CCAGCCCCGCCA(SEQIDNO:655) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna85-GluTTC(163130072-163130004)Glu(TTC)69bp Sc:22.25TCCCTGGTCTAGTGGTTAGGATTTATTATTTTCATGGCTGTGGCCTGAGTTCAATTTCCA ATCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:656) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna17-GluTTC(145016802-145016873)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:23.38TCCCTGGTGGTCTGGTGGCTAGAATTTAGCGCTTTCACCGCCGCAGCTCGGGTTGGATTA CCAGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:657) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna102-GluTTC(147545481-147545409)Glu(TTC)73bp Sc:35.32TCCGTGGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGCGCTTTCACCGCCTGCAGCTCGAGTTCGATT CCTGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:658) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna17-GluTTC(203937446-203937376)Glu(TTC)71bp Sc:39.76GCAATGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTTTCACACAGGAGACCCGGGTTCAATTCC TGACCCATGTA(SEQIDNO:659) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna105-GluTTC(147428323-147428252)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:41.70TGTCTGGTGGTCAAGTGGCTAGGATTTGGCGCTTTCACTGCCGCGGCCCGCGTTCGATTC CCGGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:660) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna110-GluTTC(146247725-146247654)Glu(TTC)72bp Sc:43.43TCCTTGGTGGTCTAGTGGCTAGGATTCGGTGCTTTCACCTGTGCGGCCCGGGTTCAATTC CCGATGAAGGAA(SEQIDNO:661) Homo_sapiens_chr4.trna1-GlnTTG(156603338-156603409)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:20.26TAGGACGTGGTGTGATAGGTAGCACAGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTAAATTC CTATAGTACTAG(SEQIDNO:662) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna26-GlnTTG(57257993-57257922)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:22.05TAGGACGTGGTGTGATAGGTAGCATGGGGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTGGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:663) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna15-GlnTTG(96014895-96014822)Gln(TTG)74bp Sc:22.16GGCAATGTAGCATTGTGGCTAAGTGCACAGGCTTTGGAAACTGGCAGGCCTGGGTTCAAA TCCCAGCTTATTCA(SEQIDNO:664) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna33-GlnTTG(19447250-19447179)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:22.33TAGGATGTGGTGTAATAGGTGGCATGGAGAATTTTGGATTATCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:665) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna14-GlnTTG(32992259-32992188)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:22.66TAGTACATAGTGTAATAGGTAGCACAGATAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATTC TTATAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:666) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna12-GlnTTG(9011428-9011356)Gln(TTG)73bp Sc:23.15AGCAGTGTAGCCTAGTGGCTAGGTCCTCTGACTTTGAAACCACGTGGTCTGGGTTTAAGT CTCAGCTGTGCTA(SEQIDNO:667) Homo_sapiens_chr13.trna6-GlnTTG(35537818-35537747)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:23.74TAGGATGTGGTGTGACAGGTAGCATGGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGTTAGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:668) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna23-GlnTTG(77354604-77354532)Gln(TTG)73bp Sc:24.04AGCTGTATATTATAGTGGAATAAATGTGGACTTTGAAGTTAGATACACCTGGGTTCAAAT CCCAGTGCTGTCA(SEQIDNO:669) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna11-GlnTTG(131859603-131859674)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:25.61TAGGACGTGGTGTGATAGGTAGCACGGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGATGGGTTCAATTC CTGTAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:670) Homo_sapiens_chrY.trna1-GlnTTG(8300214-8300140)Gln(TTG)75bpSc: 27.14TTTAGGACGTGGTGTAATAGGTAGCACAGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGTGCAGGTTCAAT TCCTATATTCTAGAG(SEQIDNO:671) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna22-GlnTTG(130746452-130746381)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:28.85TAGGACGTGGTGTGATAGGTAGCATGGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGATGGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTCCTAG(SEQIDNO:672) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna16-GlnTTG(48497531-48497457)Gln(TTG)75bp Sc:29.85TCTAGGATGTGGTGTGATAGGTAGCATGGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAAT TCCTATATTCTAGAA(SEQIDNO:673) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna9-GlnTTG(108103639-108103568)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:32.34TAGGATGTGGTGTATTAGGTAGCACAGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCGATTC CTATAATTCTAC(SEQIDNO:674) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna4-GlnTTG(141149826-141149897)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:34.30TAGGACGTGGTGTAGTAGGTAGCATGGAGAATGTTGAATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:675) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna1-GlnTTG(55223391-55223462)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:34.66TAGGACATGGTGTGATAGGTAGCATGGAGAATTTTGGATTCTCAGGGGTAGGTTCAATTC CTACAGTTCTAG(SEQIDNO:676) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna28-GlnTTG(45791017-45790945)Gln(TTG)73bp Sc:35.83GGCTGTGTACCTCAGTGGGCAAGGGTATGGACTTTGAAGCCAGACTATTTGGGTTCAAAT CCCAGCTTGGCCT(SEQIDNO:677) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna2-LysTTT(18164483-18164552)Lys(TTT)70bp Sc:20.79TCCTATAGCCCAGTGATTAGGATTCTTTGCTTTTACTACCATGACCTGGGTTCAATACCC AGTCAGGGAA(SEQIDNO:678) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna16-LysTTT(223894631-223894559)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:34.01GTTGGGGTAACTCAGTTGGTAGAGTAGCAGACTTTTCATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTTAAGT CCATGTCCAGGCA(SEQIDNO:679) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna12-LysTTT(73125354-73125282)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:38.73ACCCAGATAGCTCAGTTGATAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAATCTGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCATGT CCCTGTTCCTTAA(SEQIDNO:680) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna118-LysTTT(28769039-28768966)Lys(TTT)74bp Sc:44.65GCCTGGGTAGCTCAGTCGGTAGAGCTATCAGACTTTTAGCCTGAGGATTCAGGGTTCAAT CCCTTGCTGGGGCG(SEQIDNO:681) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna9-LysTTT(46440054-46439982)Lys(TTT)73bp Sc:53.63GCCAGGATAGTTCAGGTGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTTTAACCTGAGGGTTCAGGGTTCAAGT CTCTGTTTGGGCG(SEQIDNO:682) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna25-SeCTCA(35527152-35527079)SeC(TCA)74bp Sc:47.88GACCGTGTGGCCTTAATGGATAAGGTGTCTGACTTCAGATCAGAAGATTGAGGGTTTGAG TCCCTTTGTGGTCA(SEQIDNO:683) Homo_sapiens_chr22.trna1-SeC(e)TCA(42877870-42877955)SeC(e)(TCA)86 bpSc:62.60GCTCGGATGATCCTCAGTGGTCTGGGGTGCAGGCTTCAAACCTGTAGCT GTCTAGTGACAGAGTGGTTCAATTCCACCTTTGTAGG(SEQIDNO:684) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna8-SeC(e)TCA(50673785-50673700)SeC(e)(TCA)86 bpSc:75.99GCCCGGATGATCCTCAGTGGTCTGGGGTGCAGGCTTCAAACCTGTAGCTGTCTAG CGACAGAGTGGTTCAATTCCACCTTTCGGGC(SEQIDNO:685) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna10-SerAGA(108541249-108541330)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:29.13TGAGTTGTAGCTGAGTGGTTAAGGCAACGAGCTAGAAATTCGTTGGTTTCTCTCTGTGCA GGTTTGAATCCTGCTAATTATG(SEQIDNO:686) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna12-SerAGA(148936400-148936471)Ser(AGA)72bp Sc:62.08GGGTGTATGGCTCAGGGGTAGAGAATTTGACTAGAGATCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAATC CAGGTGCCCCCT(SEQIDNO:687) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna145-SerAGA(27629252-27629171)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:79.96GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGTGATGGACTAGAAACCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:688) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna50-SerAGA(27607966-27608047)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:86.61GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTTTCCCCACGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:689) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna35-SerAGA(8070734-8070653)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.01GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:690) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna44-SerAGA(27554570-27554651)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.01GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:691) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna46-SerAGA(27571572-27571653)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.01GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:692) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna47-SerAGA(27578797-27578878)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.01GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:693) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna5-SerAGA(26435796-26435877)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.01GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:694) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna11-SerAGA(96351142-96351061)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.01GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:695) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna147-SerAGA(27617614-27617533)Ser(AGA)82bp Sc:88.50GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTAGAAATCCATTGGGGTTTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:696) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna2-SerCGA(54870415-54870496)Ser(CGA)82bp Sc:89.14GTCACGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTCGAAATCCAATGGGGTTTCCCCGCACA GGTTCGAATCCTGTTCGTGACG(SEQIDNO:697) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna137-SerCGA(27748289-27748208)Ser(CGA)82bp Sc:89.16GCTGTGATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGTGTTGGACTCGAAATCCAATGGGGGTTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCAAATCCTGCTCACAGCG(SEQIDNO:698) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna35-SerCGA(27285607-27285688)Ser(CGA)82bp Sc:90.35GCTGTGATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTCGAAATCCAATGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCAAATCCTGCTCACAGCG(SEQIDNO:699) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna41-SerCGA(7983005-7982924)Ser(CGA)82bp Sc:92.09GCTGTGATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTCGAAATCCAATGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCTCACAGCG(SEQIDNO:700) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna175-SerGCT(26413780-26413697)Ser(GCT)84bp Sc:67.16GGAGAGGCCTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACGCG TGGGTTCGAATCCCATCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:701) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna62-SerGCT(28288794-28288875)Ser(GCT)82bp Sc:83.46GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACACGTG GGTTCGAATCCCATCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:702) Homo_sapiens_chr15.trna10-SerGCT(38673396-38673315)Ser(GCT)82bp Sc:85.34GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCATCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:703) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna7-SerGCT(8030909-8030990)Ser(GCT)82bpSc: 85.34GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCATCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:704) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna123-SerGCT(28673177-28673096)Ser(GCT)82bp Sc:85.34GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCATCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:705) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna8-SerGCT(65872167-65872248)Ser(GCT)82bp Sc:85.83GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTTTGCACGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCATCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:706) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna43-SerGCT(27373754-27373835)Ser(GCT)82bp Sc:86.80GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCTTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:707) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna31-SerGCT(27173064-27173145)Ser(GCT)82bp Sc:88.12GACGAGGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTGCTAATCCATTGTGCTCTGCACGCGTG GGTTCGAATCCCACCCTCGTCG(SEQIDNO:708) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna21-SerTGA(130749563-130749494)Ser(TGA)70bp Sc:31.73GAGAAGGTCACAGAGGTTATGGGATTGGCTTGAAACCAGTCTGTGGGGGGTTCGATTCCC TCCTTTTTCA(SEQIDNO:709) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna148-SerTGA(27581667-27581586)Ser(TGA)82bp Sc:84.78GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTTGAAATCCATTGGGGTTTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGTCGGCTACG(SEQIDNO:710) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna172-SerTGA(26420884-26420803)Ser(TGA)82bp Sc:88.25GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTTGAAATCCATTGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:711) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna51-SerTGA(27621447-27621528)Ser(TGA)82bp Sc:88.73GTAGTCGTGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGATGGACTTGAAATCCATTGGGGTTTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAATCCTGCCGACTACG(SEQIDNO:712) Homo_sapiens_chr10.trna2-SerTGA(69194267-69194348)Ser(TGA)82bp Sc:90.86GCAGCGATGGCCGAGTGGTTAAGGCGTTGGACTTGAAATCCAATGGGGTCTCCCCGCGCA GGTTCGAACCCTGCTCGCTGCG(SEQIDNO:713) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna11-SupCTA(15349410-15349483)Sup(CTA)74bp Sc:28.00GGCAGTGACGCCTACTGGTTTAGAGCACAGATTCTAGATCGAGACATTCCTGGGTTCAAA TCCCAGCACTGTTG(SEQIDNO:714) Homo_sapiens_chr21.trna1-SupTTA(14848387-14848457)Sup(TTA)71bp Sc:22.35GGCAGTGACATGTAATGGTTATGAGGGTGGACTTTAACCACACTGCCTAGGTTCAAATCC TGACTCTGTCA(SEQIDNO:715) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna17-SupTTA(56218375-56218445)Sup(TTA)71bp Sc:57.62GCCCGGATAGTTCAGTTGGTAGAGCATCAGACTTAATCAGAGGGTCCAGGGTTCAAGTCC CTGTTTGGGTG(SEQIDNO:716) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna24-ThrAGT(59957453-59957380)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:43.90AGCACCATGGCTTAGCTGGTTAAAGCACCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGAGTTTCAA TTCCAATGGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:717) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna34-ThrAGT(27238029-27238102)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:80.30GGCCCTGTGGCTTAGCTGGTCAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:718) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna60-ThrAGT(27802452-27802525)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:81.60GGCTTCGTGGCTTAGCTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGAGGCCT(SEQIDNO:719 Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna40-ThrAGT(7983568-7983495)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:81.60GGCGCCGTGGCTTAGCTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:720) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna69-ThrAGT(28801774-28801847)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:82.17GGCTCCGTAGCTTAGTTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAC TCCCAGCGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:721) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna135-ThrAGT(27760526-27760453)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:83.05GGCTCCGTGGCTTAGCTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:722) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna167-ThrAGT(26641197-26641124)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:83.05GGCTCCGTGGCTTAGCTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:723) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna36-ThrAGT(8070351-8070278)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:84.06GGCGCCGTGGCTTAGTTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:724) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna8-ThrAGT(8031203-8031276)Thr(AGT)74bpSc: 84.06GGCGCCGTGGCTTAGTTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:725) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna4-ThrAGT(38359803-38359876)Thr(AGT)74bp Sc:84.06GGCGCCGTGGCTTAGTTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTAGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:726) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna151-ThrCGT(27379618-27379547)Thr(CGT)72bp Sc:46.44GGCAGAGTGGTGCAGCGGAAGCGTGCTGGGCCCGTAACCCAGAGGTCAATGGATCGAAGC CATCCTTGGCTA(SEQIDNO:727) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna54-ThrCGT(27694114-27694187)Thr(CGT)74bp Sc:63.29GGCCCTGTAGCTCAGCGGTTGGAGCGCTGGTCTCGTAAACCTAGGGGTCGTGAGTTCAAA TCTCACCAGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:728) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna14-ThrCGT(26901213-26901284)Thr(CGT)72bp Sc:79.77GGCGCGGTGGCCAAGTGGTAAGGCGTCGGTCTCGTAAACCGAAGATCGCGGGTTCGAACC CCGTCCGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:729) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna121-ThrCGT(28724036-28723963)Thr(CGT)74bp Sc:80.30GGCTCTGTGGCTTAGTTGGCTAAAGCGCCTGTCTCGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGCGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:730) Homo_sapiens_chr16.trna15-ThrCGT(14287251-14287322)Thr(CGT)72bp Sc:80.42GGCGCGGTGGCCAAGTGGTAAGGCGTCGGTCTCGTAAACCGAAGATCACGGGTTCGAACC CCGTCCGTGCCT(SEQIDNO:731) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna125-ThrCGT(28564822-28564749)Thr(CGT)74bp Sc:80.88GGCTCTATGGCTTAGTTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTCGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAC TCCCAGTGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:732) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna13-ThrTGT(180551364-180551293)Thr(TGT)72bp Sc:75.64GGCTCCATAGCTCAGGGGTTAGAGCACTGGTCTTGTAAACCAGGGTCGCGAGTTCAAATC TCGCTGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:733) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna4-ThrTGT(20219689-20219761)Thr(TGT)73bp Sc:78.79GGCCCTATAGCTCAGGGGTTAGAGCACTGGTCTTGTAAACCAGGGGTCGCGAGTTCAAAT CTCGCTGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:734) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna20-ThrTGT(20169231-20169159)Thr(TGT)73bp Sc:79.46GGCTCCATAGCTCAGGGGTTAGAGCACTGGTCTTGTAAACCAGGGGTCGCGAGTTCAAAT CTCGCTGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:735) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna21-ThrTGT(20151861-20151789)Thr(TGT)73bp Sc:80.94GGCTCCATAGCTCAGGGGTTAGAGCGCTGGTCTTGTAAACCAGGGGTCGCGAGTTCAATT CTCGCTGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:736) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna56-ThrTGT(220704970-220705042)Thr(TGT)73bp Sc:83.03GGCTCCATAGCTCAGTGGTTAGAGCACTGGTCTTGTAAACCAGGGGTCGCGAGTTCGATC CTCGCTGGGGCCT(SEQIDNO:737) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna127-ThrTGT(28550381-28550308)Thr(TGT)74bp Sc:84.82GGCTCTATGGCTTAGTTGGTTAAAGCGCCTGTCTTGTAAACAGGAGATCCTGGGTTCGAA TCCCAGTAGAGCCT(SEQIDNO:738) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna19-TrpCCA(45246849-45246776)Trp(CCA)74bp Sc:21.17GGAAGGATGGGGCCAAGCTGGAAAGCCTGTGGGCTCCACAGTCATGTGCCTGGGTTCAAT TCCCAGTTCTGCAT(SEQIDNO:739) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna1-TrpCCA(98905243-98905314)Trp(CCA)72bp Sc:70.08GACCTCGTGGCGCAACGGCAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGTTGCGTGTTCAAATC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:740) Homo_sapiens_chr12.trna6-TrpCCA(97422161-97422232)Trp(CCA)72bp Sc:71.65GACCTCGTGGCGCAACGGTAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGCTGCGTGTTCGAATC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:741) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna6-TrpCCA(8030401-8030472)Trp(CCA)72bpSc: 74.00GACCTCGTGGCGCAACGGTAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGTTGCGTGTTCAAATC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:742) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna168-TrpCCA(26439722-26439651)Trp(CCA)72bp Sc:74.00GACCTCGTGGCGCAACGGTAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGTTGCGTGTTCAAATC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:743) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna170-TrpCCA(26427380-26427309)Trp(CCA)72bp Sc:74.00GACCTCGTGGCGCAACGGTAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGTTGCGTGTTCAAATC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:744) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna12-TrpCCA(19352086-19352157)Trp(CCA)72bp Sc:74.80GACCTCGTGGCGCAATGGTAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGTTGCGTGTTCAAGTC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:745) Homo_sapiens_chr17.trna39-TrpCCA(8064983-8064912)Trp(CCA)72bp Sc:74.81GGCCTCGTGGCGCAACGGTAGCGCGTCTGACTCCAGATCAGAAGGTTGCGTGTTCAAATC ACGTCGGGGTCA(SEQIDNO:746) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna3-TrpCCA(114656810-114656908)Trp(CCA)99bp Sc:23.38GGCAGAGGAGGGTGCAGTTGGCAGCCTGTCCAAGTCCAGCACGGTTGGAGCACAGGATTT AGAATGGGATGGTCCTGGGTTCAAACCCCAGCTGCGCCC(SEQIDNO:747) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna14-TyrATA(218818794-218818886)Tyr(ATA)93bp Sc:55.93CCTTCAATAGTTCAGCTGGTAGAGCAGAGGACTATAGCTACTTCCTCAGTAGGAGACGTC CTTAGGTTGCTGGTTCGATTCCAGCTTGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:748) Homo_sapiens_chr7.trna9-TyrGTA(148886066-148886138)Tyr(GTA)73bp Sc:49.38GGGGGTATAGCTCAGGGCTAGAGCTTTTTGACTGTAGAGCAAGAGGTCCCTGGTTCAAAT CCAGGTTCTCCCT(SEQIDNO:749) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna19-TyrGTA(20191191-20191098)Tyr(GTA)94bp Sc:74.71CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGCCTGTAGAAACATTTGTGGACAT CCTTAGGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:750) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna18-TyrGTA(20195556-20195463)Tyr(GTA)94bp Sc:75.82CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGATTGTATAGACATTTGCGGACAT CCTTAGGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCAGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:751) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna17-TyrGTA(20198050-20197957)Tyr(GTA)94bp Sc:71.83CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGACTGCGGAAACGTTTGTGGACAT CCTTAGGTCGCTGGTTCAATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:752) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna16-TyrGTA(20201284-20201191)Tyr(GTA)94bp Sc:74.71CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGATTGTACAGACATTTGCGGACAT CCTTAGGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:753) Homo_sapiens_chr14.trna5-TyrGTA(20221272-20221360)Tyr(GTA)89bp Sc:75.42CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGTACTTAATGTGTGGTCATCCTTA GGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:754) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna14-TyrGTA(26677065-26677155)Tyr(GTA)91bp Sc:76.45CCTTCGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGTTGGCTGTGTCCTTAGACATCCT TAGGTCGCTGGTTCGAATCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:755) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna15-TyrGTA(26683777-26683866)Tyr(GTA)90bp Sc:72.82CTTTCGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGGTTCATTAAACTAAGGCATCCTT AGGTCGCTGGTTCGAATCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:756) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna16-TyrGTA(26685311-26685399)Tyr(GTA)89bp Sc:77.01CCTTCGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGGCTCATTAAGCAAGGTATCCTTA GGTCGCTGGTTCGAATCCGGCTCGGAGGA(SEQIDNO:757) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna17-TyrGTA(26703081-26703169)Tyr(GTA)89bp Sc:73.91CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGGGGTTTGAATGTGGTCATCCTTA GGTCGCTGGTTCGAATCCGGCTCGGAGGA(SEQIDNO:758) Homo_sapiens_chr2.trna2-TyrGTA(27127154-27127242)Tyr(GTA)89bp Sc:75.87CCTTCGATAGCTCAGTTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGTGGATAGGGCGTGGCAATCCTTA GGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:759) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna12-TyrGTA(66772173-66772086)Tyr(GTA)88bp Sc:46.11TCTTCAATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGGTGCACGCCCGTGGCCATTCTTA GGTGCTGGTTTGATTCCGACTTGGAGAG(SEQIDNO:760) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna4-TyrGTA(67188156-67188248)Tyr(GTA)93bp Sc:73.04CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGCTACTTCCTCAGCAGGAGACATC CTTAGGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:761) Homo_sapiens_chr8.trna5-TyrGTA(67188777-67188865)Tyr(GTA)89bp Sc:69.69CCTTCGATAGCTCAGCTGGTAGAGCGGAGGACTGTAGGCGCGCGCCCGTGGCCATCCTTA GGTCGCTGGTTCGATTCCGGCTCGAAGGA(SEQIDNO:762) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna63-ValAAC(178450971-178450899)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:48.28GTTTCCATAGTGTACTGGTTATCACATTCACCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCTTGGTTTGAAA CCAGGCAGAAACA(SEQIDNO:763) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna115-ValAAC(28811256-28811185)Val(AAC)72bp Sc:64.08GGGGGTGTAGCTCAGTGGTAGAGCGTATGCTTAACATTCATGAGGCTCTGGGTTCGATCC CCAGCACTTCCA(SEQIDNO:764) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna37-ValAAC(27311267-27311339)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:74.63GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTTGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCAGAAACA(SEQIDNO:765) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna136-ValAAC(27756936-27756864)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:79.68GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCGCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:766) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna139-ValAAC(27726758-27726686)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:81.58GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCTGGATCAAAA CCAGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:767) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna15-ValAAC(180548094-180548022)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:84.70GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTCATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:768) Homo_sapiens_chr3.trna2-ValAAC(170972712-170972784)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:86.79GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:769) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna12-ValAAC(180577948-180577876)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:86.79GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:770) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna4-ValAAC(180523760-180523832)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:86.79GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:771) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna5-ValAAC(180529216-180529288)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:86.79GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:772) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna132-ValAAC(27829230-27829158)Val(AAC)73bp Sc:86.79GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTAACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:773) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna58-ValCAC(27758467-27758540)Val(CAC)74bp Sc:33.44TTTTCTGTAGTGTAGTTGTTAACACGTTCGCCTCACACGCTTAAAGTTCTCTGGTTGGAT ACCAGATGGAAATG(SEQIDNO:774) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna129-ValCAC(16879160-16879088)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:52.98GTTTCTGTGGTGTAGTGGTTATCATGTTCGCCTCACACGAGAAAAGTCCCTGATTCGAGA CTGGGTGGGAACG(SEQIDNO:775) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna32-ValCAC(27226001-27226073)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:56.94GTTTCTGTAGTATGGTGGTTATCACGTTAGTCTCACACGTGAAAGGTCCCTGGTTCGAAA CCAGGTGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:776) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna99-ValCAC(147561360-147561290)Val(CAC)71bp Sc:60.62GCACTGGTGGTTCAGTGGTAGAATTCTCGCCTCACACGCGGGACACCCGGGTTCAATTCC CGGTCAAGGCA(SEQIDNO:777) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna133-ValCAC(27804378-27804306)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:64.50GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATTATGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAAGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA TCAGGCGGGAACA(SEQIDNO:778) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna157-ValCAC(27281918-27281846)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:73.23GTTTCCGTAGTGGAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTTGAAA CCAGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:779) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna90-ValCAC(147950785-147950712)Val(CAC)74bp Sc:77.15GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGTAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAA ACCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:780) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna98-ValCAC(147565251-147565179)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:82.06GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CTGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:781) Homo_sapiens_chr19.trna13-ValCAC(4675719-4675647)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:84.20GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGCGGTTATCACATTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGATC CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:782) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna152-ValCAC(27356100-27356028)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.34GCTTCTGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCAGAAGCA(SEQIDNO:783) Homo_sapiens_chr1.trna85-ValCAC(159636186-159636114)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.39GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:784) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna10-ValCAC(180582073-180582001)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.39GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:785) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna18-ValCAC(180461931-180461859)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.39GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:786) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna2-ValCAC(180456676-180456748)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.39GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:787) Homo_sapiens_chr5.trna6-ValCAC(180533256-180533328)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.39GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:788) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna9-ValCAC(26646261-26646333)Val(CAC)73bp Sc:87.39GTTTCCGTAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTTCGCCTCACACGCGAAAGGTCCCCGGTTCGAAA CCGGGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:789) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna40-ValTAC(27366384-27366456)Val(TAC)73bp Sc:76.42GTTTCCGTGGTGTAGTGGTTATCACATTCGCCTTACACGCGAAAGGTCCTCGGGTCGAAA CCGAGCGGAAACA(SEQIDNO:790) Homo_sapiens_chr10.trna6-ValTAC(5935752-5935680)Val(TAC)73bpSc: 81.67GGTTCCATAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACATCTGCTTTACACGCAGAAGGTCCTGGGTTCAAGC CCCAGTGGAACCA(SEQIDNO:791) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna16-ValTAC(59075108-59075036)Val(TAC)73bp Sc:82.67GGTTCCATAGTGTAGCGGTTATCACGTCTGCTTTACACGCAGAAGGTCCTGGGTTCGAGC CCCAGTGGAACCA(SEQIDNO:792) Homo_sapiens_chr11.trna17-ValTAC(59074750-59074678)Val(TAC)73bp Sc:85.12GGTTCCATAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTCTGCTTTACACGCAGAAGGTCCTGGGTTCGAGC CCCAGTGGAACCA(SEQIDNO:793) Homo_sapiens_chrX.trna4-ValTAC(18603022-18602950)Val(TAC)73bp Sc:85.12GGTTCCATAGTGTAGTGGTTATCACGTCTGCTTTACACGCAGAAGGTCCTGGGTTCGAGC CCCAGTGGAACCA(SEQIDNO:794) Homo_sapiens_chr9.trna8-GlnTTG(5085156-5085085)Gln(TTG)72bpSc: 21.75TAGGATATGGTTTAATAGGTAGCATGGAGAATTTTGGAGTCTCAGGGATAGGTTCAATTC CTATAGTTCCAG(SEQIDNO:795) Homo_sapiens_chr6.trna64-GlnTTG(28665135-28665206)Gln(TTG)72bp Sc:71.88GGTCCCATGGTGTAATGGTTAGCACTCTGGACTTTGAATCCAGCAATCCGAGTTCGAATC TCGGTGGGACCT(SEQIDNO:796)