Home Help [Feedback] [For Subscribers] [Archive] [Search] [Contents]
QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]
Author:
Keyword(s):
Year:  Vol:  Page: 


Receive this page by email each issue: [Sign up for eTOCs]

Volume 15, Issue 8:  April 15, 2001  [Index by Author]  [Cover Caption] 

Cover Image
Other Issues:
  Reviews
  Research Communications
  Research Papers
Find articles in this issue containing these words:
[Search ALL Issues]


To see an article, click its [Full Text] link. To review many abstracts, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Abstract(s)' button. To see one abstract at a time, click its [Abstract] link.

Reviews:

Harry T. Orr
Beyond the Qs in the polyglutamine diseases
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 925-932. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Research Communications:

Polly R. Prince, Mary J. Emond, and Raymond J. Monnat, Jr.
Loss of Werner syndrome protein function promotes aberrant mitotic recombination
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 933-938. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Monika Dieterle, Yong-Chun Zhou, Eberhard Schäfer, Markus Funk, and Thomas Kretsch
EID1, an F-box protein involved in phytochrome A-specific light signaling
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 939-944. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Research Papers:

Lajos Haracska, Ildiko Unk, Robert E. Johnson, Erik Johansson, Peter M.J. Burgers, Satya Prakash, and Louise Prakash
Roles of yeast DNA polymerases delta and zeta and of Rev1 in the bypass of abasic sites
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 945-954. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Laura N. Rusché and Jasper Rine
Conversion of a gene-specific repressor to a regional silencer
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 955-967. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Helen Morrison, Larry S. Sherman, James Legg, Fatima Banine, Clare Isacke, Carrie A. Haipek, David H. Gutmann, Helmut Ponta, and Peter Herrlich
The NF2 tumor suppressor gene product, merlin, mediates contact inhibition of growth through interactions with CD44
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 968-980. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Almut Schulze, Kerstin Lehmann, Harold B.J. Jefferies, Martin McMahon, and Julian Downward
Analysis of the transcriptional program induced by Raf in epithelial cells
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 981-994. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Shigeru Mitsui, Shun Yamaguchi, Takuya Matsuo, Yoshiki Ishida, and Hitoshi Okamura
Antagonistic role of E4BP4 and PAR proteins in the circadian oscillatory mechanism
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 995-1006. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Patricia Hidalgo, Aseem Z. Ansari, Peter Schmidt, Brian Hare, Natasha Simkovich, Susan Farrell, Eun Ji Shin, Mark Ptashne, and Gerhard Wagner
Recruitment of the transcriptional machinery through GAL11P: structure and interactions of the GAL4 dimerization domain
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 1007-1020. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Mark A. Hiller, Ting-Yi Lin, Cricket Wood, and Margaret T. Fuller
Developmental regulation of transcription by a tissue-specific TAF homolog
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 1021-1030. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Christina Tenenhaus, Kuppuswamy Subramaniam, Melanie A. Dunn, and Geraldine Seydoux
PIE-1 is a bifunctional protein that regulates maternal and zygotic gene expression in the embryonic germ line of Caenorhabditis elegans
Genes Dev. 2001 15: 1031-1040. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

To see an article, click its [Full Text] link. To review many abstracts, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Abstract(s)' button. To see one abstract at a time, click its [Abstract] link.


Cover Caption:

Cover

PIE-1 is required for the efficient expression of maternally encoded factors in the Caenorhabditis elegans germ-line. Shown here are three time-lapse Normarski images of a single embryo expressing a version of pie-1 in which the second zinc finger is mutated. Regulation of the Nanos homologue NOS-2 by PIE-1 is required for the proper positioning of primordial germ cells during embryogenesis. A mutation in the second CCCH finger of PIE-1 causes a reduction in NOS-2 expression, and the subsequent displacement of primordial germ cells from the somatic gonad. As visualized here, a germ cell exits the embryo completely, and floats freely within the confines of the egg shell. This novel action of PIE-1 is independent from its previously identified role in germ cell transcriptional quiescence. (For details, see Tenenhaus et al., p. 1031).



Home Help [Feedback] [For Subscribers] [Archive] [Search] [Contents]
Genome Res. Learn. Mem.
Protein Science RNA Genes Dev.
Copyright © 2004 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.