Mobilization and Reassembly of Genetic Information
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Mobilization and Reassembly of Genetic Information

  1. 480 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Mobilization and Reassembly of Genetic Information

About this book

Mobilization and Reassembly of Genetic Information documents the proceedings of the Miami Winter Symposium, sponsored by the Department of Biochemistry, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, January 1970. This volume is the 17th in the ""Miami Winter Symposia"" series. Topics for the Miami Winter Symposia focus on areas of biochemistry in which recent progress offers new insights into the molecular basis of biological phenomena. The manuscripts presented by researchers at the symposium cover a wide range of topics including modified gene expressions induced by transposable elements; regulation of tn3 transposition and specificity of its insertion sites; the fusion of DNA molecules and genetic recombination; and control of cell type in yeast by genetic cassettes. Subsequent chapters include studies such as stable and unstable expression of genes in DNA transformed cells; transposable elements in the Drosophila genome; the genesis of avian retrovirus oncogenes; synthesis and processing of the mouse ? globin mRNA precursor; and type C virus expression in human placenta.

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Yes, you can access Mobilization and Reassembly of Genetic Information by Walter Scott in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Biology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Front Cover
  2. Mobilization and Reassembly of Genetic Information
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Table of Contents
  5. Speakers, Chairmen, and Discussants
  6. Preface
  7. Chapter 1. A Review of the Eleventh Feodor Lynen Lecture Given by Fred Sanger
  8. Chapter 2. MODIFIED GENE EXPRESSIONS INDUCED BY TRANSPOSABLE ELEMENTS
  9. Chapter 3. STUDIES WITH IS4
  10. Chapter 4. DNA SEQUENCE REARRANGEMENTS WITHIN IS2 AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON GENE EXPRESSION
  11. Chapter 5. A GENETIC ANALYSIS OF THE TRANSPOSON TN3: EVIDENCE FOR COINTEGRATES AS INTERMEDIATES IN TRANSPOSITION
  12. Chapter 6. REGULATION OF Tn3 TRANSPOSITION AND SPECIFICITY OF ITS INSERTION SITES
  13. Chapter 7. Transposable Genetic Elements: The Mu Paradigm
  14. Chapter 8. THE FUSION OF DNA MOLECULES AND GENETIC RECOMBINATION
  15. Chapter 9. EXCISION AND REPLICATION SEQUENCES IN THE MITOCHONDRIAL GENOME OF YEAST
  16. Chapter 10. CONTROL OF CELL TYPE IN YEAST BY GENETIC CASSETTES
  17. Chapter 11.STRUCTURE AND EVOLUTION OF GROWTH HORMONE RELATED GENES
  18. Chapter 12. STABLE AND UNSTABLE EXPRESSION OF GENES IN DNA TRANSFORMED CELLS
  19. Chapter 13. FORMATION OF β-GL0BIN FOLLOWING INFECTION WITH RECOMBINANTS CONTAINING RABBIT -GLOBIN cDNA AT DIFFERENT LOCATIONS OF SV40 ' s LATE REGION
  20. Chapter 14. REPETITIVE DNA ELEMENTS RELATED TO THE RIBOSOMAL INSERTION OF DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER
  21. Chapter 15. TRANSPOSABLE ELEMENTS IN THE DROSOPHILA GENOME
  22. Chapter 16. SITE-SPECIFIC RECOMBINATION IN BACTERIOPHAGE λ: REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PHAGE att SITE AND ORGANIZATION OF THE RECOMBINATION FUNCTIONS
  23. Chapter 17. THE GENESIS OF AVIAN RETROVIRUS ONCOGENES
  24. Chapter 18. INITIATION OF MOLECULAR CLONING OF A TRANSFORMING ALLELE OF CHEMICALLY TRANSFORMED MOUSE CELLS
  25. Chapter 19. CAPPED EUKARYOTIC MESSENGER RNAs ARE PRIMERS FOR INFLUENZA VIRAL RNA TRANSCRIPTION1
  26. Chapter 20. A RECURRING SV40 VARIANT CONTAINING MONKEY DNA SEQUENCES
  27. Chapter 21. TWO YEAST tRNA GENES CONTAINING INTERVENING SEQUENCES
  28. Chapter 22. SYNTHESIS AND PROCESSING OF THE MOUSE β GLOBIN mRNA PRECURSOR
  29. Chapter 23. THE ROLE OF RNA SPLICING IN REGULATION OF VIRAL GENE EXPRESSION
  30. Chapter 24. TRANSCRIPTION OF ANIMAL VIRUS GENES IN VITRO
  31. Chapter 25. YEAST MITOCHONDRIAL INTRON PRODUCTS REQUIRED INTRONS FOR RNA SPLICING
  32. Chapter 26. FUNCTIONAL VIRAL POLY(A)+ AND POLY (A)-MESSAGE IN ADENOVIRUS 5-INFECTED CELLS
  33. Chapter 27. PURIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF DNA-DEPENDENT RNA POLYMERASE FROM VACCINIA VIRIONS
  34. Chapter 28. INDUCTION OF THE TRANSFORMED PHENOTYPE IN RAT FIBROBLASTS BY TRANSFECTION OF CHROMOSOMAL DNA EXTRACTED FROM POLYOMA TRANSFORMED RAT CELLS.
  35. Chapter 29. WHAT IS THE CHEMICAL NATURE OF CYTOPLASMIC REGULATORY FACTOR FOR PHENYLALANINE HYDROXYLASE GENE?
  36. Chapter 30. SEQUENCES THAT FLANK THE INTERVENING SEQUENCE IN rDNA ARE HIGHLY CONSERVED IN EVOLUTION.
  37. Chapter 31. A PATHWAY OF SPECIFIC SPLICING STEPS IN CYTOCHROME b mRNA PROCESSING REVEALED IN YEAST MITOCHONDRIA BY MUTATIONAL BLOCKS WITHIN THE INTRONS AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A CIRCULAR RNA DERIVED FROM A COMPLEMENTABLE INTRON.
  38. Chapter 32. TYPE C VIRUS EXPRESSION IN HUMAN PLACENTA
  39. Chapter 33. ORGANIZATION OF EARLY HISTONE REPEATS IN THE SEA URCHIN STRONGULOCENTROTUS PURPURATUS
  40. Chapter 34. ORGANIZATION OF LATE HISTONE GENE REPEATS IN THE SEA URCHIN STRONGULOCENTROTUS PURPURATUS
  41. Chapter 35. INTERFERENCE OF AN AZOCARCINOGEN WITH RNA PROCESSING. A POSSIBLE FUNCTION OF REPEAT RNA SEQUENCES IN THE MAINTENANCE OF CONTINUOUS PROCESSING OF NUCLEAR RNA.
  42. Chapter 36. INTEGRATION OF PLASMID SEQUENCES INTO MITOCHONDRIAL CHROMOSOMAL DNA UPON REVERSION OF S-TYPE CYTOPLASMIC MALE STERILE PLANTS TO FERTILITY IN MAIZE.
  43. Chapter 37. mRNA (NUCLEOSIDE-2' -) METHYLTRANSFERASES FROM HELA CELLS
  44. Chapter 38. The intracisternal A-particle genome: An extensively reiterated Interspersed genetic element of Mus museulus.
  45. Chapter 39. mRNAs AND PROTEINS CODED BY AGROBACTERIUM TUMEFACIENS T-DNA OF CROWN GALL TUMORS
  46. Chapter 40. CHROMOSOMAL LOCALIZATION IN ISOGENIC LINES OF A CLONED DROSOPHILA DNA SEQUENCE: ANALYSIS BY IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION
  47. Chapter 41. BASE SEQUENCE OF THE INTERSPERSED 300 nt REPEATED SEQUENCES INHUMAN DNA
  48. Chapter 42. INTEGRATION AND EXPRESSION OF ROUS SARCOMA VIRUS DNA IN TRANSFORMED CHICK EMBRYO FIBROBLASTS
  49. Chapter 43. TRANSPOSON INDUCED MUTATIONS IN THE GENES CODING FOR THE ACETOHYDROXY ACID SYNTHASE (AHAS) ISOZYMES IN Salmonella typhimurium.
  50. Chapter 44. CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN Gγ AND Aγ FETAL GLOBIN GENES
  51. Chapter 45. ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF GENOMIC DNA SEQUENCES CODING FOR THE PRO al CHAIN OF SHEEP TYPE I PROCOLLAGEN
  52. Chapter 46. FORMATION OF PlargF SPECIALIZED TRANSDUCING BACTERIOPHAGE: INVOLVEMENT OF IS1.
  53. Chapter 47. NEW SYNTHETIC OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SPECIFIC TRIMMING OF DNA AND FOR SEQUENCING DNA
  54. Chapter 48. A Cloning Vehicle with Poly (dA) and Poly (dT ) Stretches on Complementary Strands; Applications for Strand Separation
  55. Chapter 49. JUNCTION SEQUENCES OF AN ERYTHROMYCIN TRANSPOSON (Tn551) FROM S. aureus
  56. Chapter 50. SUBUNIT STRUCTURES OF DIFFERENT ELECTROPHORETIC FORMS OF NUCLEOSOMES
  57. Chapter 51. PROMOTOR SITES IN BOVINE MITOCHONDRIAL DNA
  58. Chapter 52. EUKARYOTIC JUMPING GENES WITH LARGE INVERTED REPEATS .
  59. Chapter 53. ENDODEOXYRIBONUCLEASE MUTANTS OF SALMONELLA TYPHIMURIUM LT2
  60. Chapter 54. ORGANIZATION OF THE MOUSE HISTONE GENES
  61. Chapter 55. IMPROVED METHODS FOR RECOMBINANT cDNA CONSTRUCTION
  62. Chapter 56. GENETIC STUDIES ON TRANS-ACTING REGULATORY EFFECTS IN HIGHER EUKARYOTES AS REVEALED BY CHROMOSOMAL IMBALANCE
  63. Chapter 57. Y CHROMOSOME CONTROL OF SPERMATOGENESIS IN DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER
  64. Chapter 58. LOCALIZATION OF E. COLI RNA POLYMERASE INITIATION SITES ON SV40 DNA.
  65. Chapter 59. MOLECULAR RECOMBINATION BETWEEN SIMIAN VIRUS 40 AND MONKEY CELL DNAs
  66. Chapter 60. STUDIES ON CLONED HUMAN GLOBIN GENES
  67. Chapter 61. TRANSPOSITION IN THE DIMORPHIC BACTERIUM CAULQBACTER CRESCENTUS
  68. Chapter 62. TWO-DIMENSIONAL NATIVE-SDS PAGE ANALYSIS OF MAIZE MALATE DEHYDROGENASE ISOZYMES: EVIDENCE FOR "SIZE ALLELES"
  69. Chapter 63. ISOGENIC RESCUE, A METHOD FOR STUDYING NONCONDITIONALLETHAL MUTANTS OF VIRULENT PHAGES: APPLICATION TO ϕX 174
  70. Chapter 64. AMPLIFICATION OF DIHYDROFOLATE REDUCTASE GENES IN ANTIFOLATE RESISTANT CHINESE HAMSTER LUNG FIBROBLASTS
  71. Chapter 65. TRANSFER OF A TEMPERATURE-SENSITIVE THYMIDINE KINASE GENE TO MOUSE CELLS
  72. Chapter 66. IMMUNOPRECIPITATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF TOTAL RNA TRANSLATION PRODUCTS FROM A PATHOGENIC CESTODE : TAENIA SOLIUM LARVAE.
  73. Chapter 67. Differential Hormone Responsiveness of the Ovalbumin Geneand its Pseudogenes in the Chick Oviduct
  74. Chapter 68. EXPRESSION OF HUMAN α-GLOBIN GENES IN HYBRID MOUSE ERYTHROLEUKEMIA CELLS
  75. Chapter 69. Transitions of genomic DNA organisation
  76. Chapter 70. NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE AND STRUCTURAL FEATURES OF THE COMMON REGION OF AVIAN SARCOMA VIRUS
  77. Chapter 71. LOCALIZATION OF SINGLE COPY DNA SEQUENCES ON G-BANDED HUMAN CHROMOSOMES BY IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION
  78. Chapter 72. OVALBUMIN IS SYNTHESIZED IN MOUSE CELLS TRANFORMED WITH THENATURAL CHICKEN OVALBUMIN GENE
  79. Chapter 73. SITE PREFERENCE BY RESTRICTION ENDONUCLEASES
  80. Chapter 74. MAPPING OF THE TRANSFORMING REGION OF HARVEY SARCOMA VIRUS GENOME USING INSERTION-DELETION MUTANTS CONSTRUCTED IN VITRO
  81. Chapter 75. SELECTION OF RAT HEPATOMA CELL VARIANTS WITH ALTEREDGLUCOCORTICOID RESPONSE
  82. Chapter 76. A RESTRICTION MAP OF BACTERIOPHAGE T3
  83. Chapter 77. CHARACTERIZATION OF T7 PROMOTER SEQUENCES
  84. Chapter 78. THE STRUCTURE OF TRANSPOSABLE MATING TYPE GENES IN YEAST
  85. Chapter 79. COMPLEMENTATION OF Saccharomyces cerevisiae leu2 AUXOTROPHS BY THE LEUCINE OPERON OF Escherichia coli
  86. Chapter 80. Altered Patterns of Integrated SV40 DNA in Clonal Derivatives of tsA Mutant Transformed Mouse Cells
  87. Chapter 81. RNA SPLICING PATTERNS OF IMMUNOGLOBULIN GENES
  88. Chapter 82. EXPRESSION OF THE HERPES SIMPLEX VIRUS THYMIDINE KINASE GENE AND THE rDNA GENE OF Tetrahymena thermophila IN Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  89. Chapter 83. CONSTRUCTION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF NEW CLONING VEHICLES. IV . DELETIONS OF pB R322 AND pB R325
  90. Chapter 84. DIFFERENTIAL EXPRESSION AND INDUCTION OF VIRUS ANTIGENS IN CULTURED MOUSE MAMMARY TUMOR SUBPOPULATIONS
  91. Chapter 85. NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE IN EARLY REGION El OF ADENOVIRUS DNAs
  92. Chapter 86. NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE ANALYSIS OF THE CHLORAMPHENICOL RESISTANCE TRANSPOSON Tn9.
  93. Chapter 87. ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF SV40 NONOONDITIONAL REPLICATION-DEFICIENT MUTANTS