2 results match your criteria: "(UFR 927 Univ. P. et M. Curie and URA 2171 CNRS)[Affiliation]"

Integration of mitochondrial DNA fragments into nuclear chromosomes (giving rise to nuclear DNA sequences of mitochondrial origin, or NUMTs) is an ongoing process that shapes nuclear genomes. In yeast this process depends on double-strand-break repair. Since NUMTs lack amplification and specific integration mechanisms, they represent the prototype of exogenous insertions in the nucleus.

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Distance from the chromosome end determines the efficiency of double strand break repair in subtelomeres of haploid yeast.

J Mol Biol

May 2003

Unité de Génétique Moléculaire des Levures, (UFR 927 Univ. P. et M. Curie and URA 2171 CNRS), Structure and Dynamics of Genomes Departement, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.

Double strand break (DSB) repair plays an important role in chromosome evolution. We have investigated the fate of DSBs as a function of their location along the yeast chromosome XI, in a system where no conventional homologous recombination can occur. We report that the relative frequency of non-homologous endjoining (NHEJ), which is the exclusive mode of DSB repair in the internal chromosomal portion, decreases gradually towards the telomere, keeping the absolute frequency nearly constant, and that other repair mechanisms, which generally involve the loss of the distal chromosomal fragment, appear in subtelomeric regions.

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