Publications by authors named "Elizabeth C Gray"

Structured cis-regulatory RNAs have evolved across all domains of life, highlighting the utility and plasticity of RNA as a regulatory molecule. Homologous RNA sequences and structures often have similar functions, but homology may also be deceiving. The challenges that derive from trying to assign function to structure and vice versa are not trivial.

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Most researchers confidently assume that transformation of recombinant plasmid libraries into microbial hosts followed by outgrowth of isolated colonies results in a "one cell-one mutant gene-one protein variant" paradigm. Indeed, this assumption is supported by the overwhelming majority of published studies employing bacterial expression hosts. In stark contrast, we recently reported on Saccharomyces cerevisiae libraries containing unexpectedly high frequencies of cells harboring heterogeneous mixtures of plasmids, so called Multiple Vector Transformants (MVT).

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Background: In addition to providing the molecular machinery for transcription and translation, recombinant microbial expression hosts maintain the critical genotype-phenotype link that is essential for high throughput screening and recovery of proteins encoded by plasmid libraries. It is known that Escherichia coli cells can be simultaneously transformed with multiple unique plasmids and thusly complicate recombinant library screening experiments. As a result of their potential to yield misleading results, bacterial multiple vector transformants have been thoroughly characterized in previous model studies.

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