Introduction: The presented study examines to which extent the quality of life and experiences of relatives giving care to patients with psychotic disorders are being influenced by patient- or relative-dependent factors.
Material And Methods: The quality of life and experiences of care-giving of 33 relatives of patients with a schizophrenic spectrum disorder were assessed. Applying a multiple regression model, they were correlated to the relatives' internal locus of control as well as to data referring to the patients' disease.
In-frame overlapping genes in phage, plasmid and bacterial genomes permit synthesis of more than one form of protein from the same gene. Having one gene entirely within another rather than two separate genes presumably precludes recombination events between the identical sequences. However, studies of such gene pairs indicate that the overlapping arrangement can make regulation of the genes more difficult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn pairs of adjacent genes co-transcribed on bacterial polycistronic mRNAs, translation of the first coding region frequently functions as a positive factor to couple translation to the distal coding region. Coupling efficiencies vary over a wide range, but synthesis of both gene products at similar levels is common. We report the results of characterizing an unusual gene pair, in which only about 1% of the translational activity from the upstream gene is transmitted to the distal gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe problem of mRNA decay in E. coli has recently seen exciting progress, with the discoveries that key degradation enzymes are associated together in a high molecular weight degradosome and that polyadenylation promotes decay. Recent advances make it clear that mRNA decay in bacteria is far more interesting enzymatically than might have been predicted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo define basic features of mRNA processing and decay in Escherichia coli, we have examined a set of mRNAs encoded by the filamentous phage f1 that have structures typical of bacterial mRNAs. They bear a stable hairpin stem-loop on the 3' end left from rho-independent termination and are known to undergo processing by RNase E. A small percentage of the f1 mRNAs were found to bear poly(A) tails that were attached to heterogeneous positions near the common 3' end.
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