3 results match your criteria: "National Cancer Institutegrid.48336.3a at Frederick[Affiliation]"
Microbiol Spectr
August 2022
Viral Recombination Section, HIV Dynamics and Replication Program, National Cancer Institutegrid.48336.3a at Frederick, Frederick, Maryland, USA.
HIV-1 must package its RNA genome to generate infectious viruses. Recent studies have revealed that during genome packaging, HIV-1 not only excludes cellular mRNAs, but also distinguishes among full-length viral RNAs. Using NL4-3 and MAL molecular clones, multiple transcription start sites (TSS) were identified, which generate full-length RNAs that differ by only a few nucleotides at the 5' end.
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June 2022
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Bacteriology, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Bacterial cells and their associated plasmids and bacteriophages encode numerous small proteins of unknown function. One example, the 73-amino-acid protein TraR, is encoded by the transfer operon of the conjugative F plasmid of Escherichia coli. TraR is a distant homolog of DksA, a protein found in almost all proteobacterial species that is required for ppGpp to regulate transcription during the stringent response.
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February 2022
Viral Mutation Section, HIV Dynamics and Replication Program, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institutegrid.48336.3a at Frederick, Frederick, Maryland, USA.
The relationship between spatiotemporal distribution of HIV-1 proviruses and their transcriptional activity is not well understood. To elucidate the intranuclear positions of transcriptionally active HIV-1 proviruses, we utilized an RNA fluorescence hybridization assay and RNA stem loops that bind to fluorescently labeled bacterial protein (Bgl-mCherry) to specifically detect HIV-1 transcription sites. Initially, transcriptionally active wild-type proviruses were located closer to the nuclear envelope (NE) than expected by random chance in HeLa (∼1.
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