Carol M. Rubin
University of California, Davis
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Featured researches published by Carol M. Rubin.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1981
Prescott L. Deininger; Douglas J. Jolly; Carol M. Rubin; Theodore Friedmann; Carl W. Schmid
Abstract A band of 300 nucleotide long duplex DNA is released by treating renatured repeated human DNA with the single strand-specific endonuclease S 1 . Since many of the interspersed repeated sequences in human DNA are 300 nucleotides long, this band should be enriched in such repeats. We have determined the nucleotide sequences of 15 clones constructed from these 300 nucleotide S 1 -resistant repeats. Ten of these cloned sequences are members of the Alu family of interspersed repeats. These ten sequences share a recognizable consensus sequence from which individual clones have an average divergence of 12.8%. The 300 nucleotide Alu family consensus sequence has a dimeric structure and was evidently formed from a head to tail duplication of an ancestral monomeric sequence. Three of the remaining clones are variations on a simple pentanucleotide sequence previously reported for human satellite III DNA. Two of the 15 clones have distinct and complex sequences and may represent other families of interspersed repeated sequences.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1996
Mark A. Batzer; Prescott L. Deininger; Utha Hellmann-Blumberg; Jerzy Jurka; Damian Labuda; Carol M. Rubin; Carl W. Schmid; Ewa Ziętkiewicz; Emile Zuckerkandl
1 Human Genome Center, L-452, Biology and Biotechnology Research Program, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, P.O. Box 808, Livermore, CA 94551, USA 2 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Center for Human and Molecular Genetics, Louisiana State University Medical Center, 1901 Perdido St., New Orleans, LA 70112, USA 3 Department of Chemistry, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA 4 Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine, 440 Page Mill Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306, USA 5 Centre de Recherche, Hopital Ste-Justine, Departement de Pediatrie, Universite de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1C5 6 Section of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA 7 Institute of Molecular Medical Sciences, 460 Page Mill Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306, USA
Gene | 1999
Tzu-Huey Li; Jimmy L. Spearow; Carol M. Rubin; Carl W. Schmid
The possible functionality of short interspersed elements (SINEs) is investigated by assaying the effects of physiological stress on their RNA polymerase-III-directed transcriptional expression in vivo. B2 RNA is expressed at moderately high levels in all mouse tissues investigated, namely liver, spleen, kidney and testis. B1 RNA is expressed in testis but is nearly undetectable in the other tissues. Following hyperthermic shock, the amounts of B1 and B2 SINE RNAs transiently increase in all tissues by as much as 40-fold in certain cases. The kinetics of these increases resemble those of heat shock protein mRNAs. An acute dose of ethanol also transiently increases the abundance of B1 and B2 RNA in liver, showing that other physiological stresses increase SINE RNA expression. The constitutive expression of B2 RNA in all tissues and tissue-specific differences in expression of B1 RNA imply that these transcripts serve a normal physiological function(s). Moreover, increased SINE RNA expression is a vital response to stress and by the criterion of their inducibility, mammalian SINEs behave like regulated cell stress genes.
Gene | 2001
Cheonkoog Kim; Carol M. Rubin; Carl W. Schmid
During heat shock recovery in Hela cells, the level of Alu RNA transiently increases with kinetics that approximately parallel the transient expression of heat shock protein mRNAs. Coincidentally, there is a transient increase in the accessibility of Alu chromatin to restriction enzyme cleavage suggesting that an opening and re-closing of chromatin regulates the Alu stress response. Similar changes occur in alpha satellite and LINE1 chromatin showing that heat shock induces a genome-wide remodeling of chromatin structure which is independent of transcription. The increased accessibility of restriction sites within these repetitive sequences is inconsistent with a simple lengthening of the nucleosome linker region but instead suggests a scrambling of nucleosome positions. Chromatin structure and its dynamics account for many of the principal features of SINE transcriptional regulation potentially providing a functional rationale for the dispersion and high copy number of SINEs.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1980
Carol M. Rubin; Prescott L. Deininger; Catherine M. Houck; Carl W. Schmid
Abstract A family of 342 nucleotide fragments was isolated from total bonnet monkey DNA by the restriction endonuclease HaeIII and its base sequence was determined. This family was found to consist of a dimer of two related but distinct nucleotide sequences. Both sequences are closely related to previously reported sequences from African green monkey and human DNA. The two bonnet monkey sequences are unequally divergent from the African green monkey sequence, and have fewer bases in common with each other than they do with African green monkey. Restriction of the dimer with other endonucleases confirms the inequality of the two monomers.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008
Karl D. Murray; Carol M. Rubin; Edward G. Jones; Leo M. Chalupa
In anthropoid primates, cells in the magnocellular and parvocellular layers of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) are distinguished by unique retinal inputs, receptive field properties, and laminar terminations of their axons in visual cortex. To identify genes underlying these phenotypic differences, we screened RNA from magnocellular and parvocellular layers of adult macaque dLGN for layer-specific differences in gene expression. Real-time quantitative reverse transcription-PCR and in situ hybridization were used to confirm gene expression in adult and fetal macaque. Cellular localization of gene expression revealed 11 new layer-specific markers, of which 10 were enriched in magnocellular layers (BRD4, CAV1, EEF1A2, FAM108A1, INα, KCNA1, NEFH, NEFL, PPP2R2C, and SFRP2) and one was enriched in parvocellular and koniocellular layers (TCF7L2). These markers relate to functions involved in development, transcription, and cell signaling, with Wnt/β-catenin and neurofilament pathways figuring prominently. A subset of markers was differentially expressed in the fetal dLGN during a developmental epoch critical for magnocellular and parvocellular pathway formation. These results provide new evidence for the molecular differentiation of magnocellular and parvocellular streams through the primate dLGN.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Carol M. Rubin; Deborah van der List; Jose M. Ballesteros; Andrey V. Goloshchapov; Leo M. Chalupa; Barbara Chapman
Mice lacking expression of the ß2 subunit of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (CHRNB2) display abnormal retinal waves and a dispersed projection of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons to their dorsal lateral geniculate nuclei (dLGNs). Transcriptomes of LGN tissue from two independently generated Chrnb2−/− mutants and from wildtype mice were obtained at postnatal day 4 (P4), during the normal period of segregation of eye-specific afferents to the LGN. Microarray analysis reveals reduced expression of genes located on the cell membrane or in extracellular space, and of genes active in cell adhesion and calcium signaling. In particular, mRNA for cadherin 1 (Cdh1), a known axon growth regulator, is reduced to nearly undetectable levels in the LGN of P4 mutant mice and Lypd2 mRNA is similarly suppressed. Similar analysis of retinal tissue shows increased expression of crumbs 1 (Crb1) and chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 21 (Ccl21) mRNAs in Chrnb2−/− mutant animals. Mutations in these genes are associated with retinal neuronal degeneration. The retinas of Chrnb2−/− mutants are normal in appearance, but the increased expression of these genes may also be involved in the abnormal projection patterns of RGC to the LGN. These data may provide the tools to distinguish the interplay between neural activity and molecular expression. Finally, comparison of the transcriptomes of the two different Chrnb2−/− mutant strains reveals the effects of genetic background upon gene expression.
Mechanistic Studies of DNA Replication and Genetic Recombination | 1980
Prescott L. Deininger; Douglas J. Jolly; Theodore Friedmann; Carol M. Rubin; Cathy Houck; Carl W. Schmid
ABSTRACT We have recently reported a major family of human interspersed repeated DNA sequences. This family of sequences makes up greater than 3% of human DNA and is spread throughout most of the genome. This sequence family is also the major source of duplex regions in hnRNA and shows homology to a Chinese hamster repeated DNA sequence and low molecular weight RNA. Furthermore, the ubiquitous repeats act as RNA polymerase III pro-moters in vitro and show strong homologies to sequences around viral origins of replication. We have isolated and cloned sequences from the major class of human inter-spersed repeats, the “ubiquitous repeats”. Our sequence analysis of cloned ubiquitous repeats shows that these sequences contain a diverged, head-to-tail dimer structure which duplicates most of the homology regions mentioned above. An analysis of certain aspects of sequence heterogeneity and evolution of these sequences is also presented.
Nature | 1980
Carol M. Rubin; Catherine M. Houck; Prescott L. Deininger; Theodore Friedmann; Carl W. Schmid
Nucleic Acids Research | 1980
Carol M. Rubin; Carl W. Schmid