Publications by authors named "Kimberly C Lindstrom"

Article Synopsis
  • Scientists study how places where DNA copies itself, called origins of replication, are important for living things but often change over time.
  • They compared two types of yeast to see how these origins have stayed the same or changed over 150 million years.
  • They found that while some similarities exist, like patterns near important genes, the actual locations of these origins often change, which means that origins are always being created and lost.
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Sequencing of the yeast Kluyveromyces waltii (recently renamed Lachancea waltii) provided evidence of a whole genome duplication event in the lineage leading to the well-studied Saccharomyces cerevisiae. While comparative genomic analyses of these yeasts have proven to be extremely instructive in modeling the loss or maintenance of gene duplicates, experimental tests of the ramifications following such genome alterations remain difficult. To transform L.

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The packaging of DNA into chromatin allows eukaryotic cells to organize and compact their genomes but also creates an environment that is generally repressive to nuclear processes that depend upon DNA accessibility. There are several classes of enzymes that modulate the primary structure of chromatin to regulate various DNA-dependent processes. The biochemical activities of the yeast Isw1 ATP-dependent chromatin-remodeling enzyme have been well characterized in vitro, but little is known about how these activities are utilized in vivo.

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