Farida Latif
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Farida Latif.
Oncogene | 1998
Vasi Sundaresan; Grace Chung; Amanda Heppell-Parton; J Xiong; Catherine Grundy; Ian Roberts; Louise A James; Anthony Cahn; Anthony Bench; Jenny Douglas; John D. Minna; Yoshitaka Sekido; Michael I. Lerman; Farida Latif; Jonas Bergh; Hua Li; Nick Lowe; Donald J. Ogilvie; Pamela Rabbitts
We have constructed a physical map of the region homozygously deleted in the U2020 cell line at 3p12, including the location of putative CpG islands. Adjacent to one of these islands, we have identified and cloned a new gene (DUTT1) and used probes from this gene to detect two other homozygous deletions occurring in lung and breast carcinomas: the smallest deletion is within the gene itself and would result in a truncated protein. The DUTT1 gene is a member of the neural cell adhesion molecule family, although its widespread expression suggests it plays a less specialized role compared to other members of the family.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996
Gunamani Sithanandam; Farida Latif; Fuh Mei Duh; Ricardo A. Bernal; Ute Smola; Hua Li; Igor Kuzmin; Viktor Wixler; L. Geil; Sadeep Shrestha; Patricia Lloyd; Scott Bader; Yoshitaka Sekido; Kenneth D. Tartof; Eugene R. Zabarovsky; Michael Dean; George Klein; Michael I. Lerman; John D. Minna; Ulf R. Rapp; Rando Allikmets
NotI linking clones, localized to the human chromosome 3p21.3 region and homozygously deleted in small cell lung cancer cell lines NCI-H740 and NCI-H1450, were used to search for a putative tumor suppressor gene(s). One of these clones, NL1G210, detected a 2.5-kb mRNA in all examined human tissues, expression being especially high in the heart and skeletal muscle. Two overlapping cDNA clones containing the entire open reading frame were isolated from a human heart cDNA library and fully characterized. Computer analysis and a search of the GenBank database to reveal high sequence identity of the product of this gene to serine-threonine kinases, especially to mitogen-activated protein kinase-activated protein kinase 2, a recently described substrate of mitogen-activated kinases. Sequence identitiy was 72% at the nucleotide level and 75% at the amino acid level, strongly suggesting that this protein is a serine-threonine kinase. Here we demonstrate that the new gene, referred to as 3pK (for chromosome 3p kinase), in fact encodes a mitogen-activated protein kinase-regulated protein serine-threonine kinase with a novel substrate specificity.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1994
James G. Herman; Farida Latif; Y. Weng; Michael I. Lerman; Berton Zbar; Song-Yuan Liu; D Samid; D S Duan; James R. Gnarra; W M Linehan
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996
Yoshitaka Sekido; Scott Bader; Farida Latif; Jeou Yuan Chen; Fuh Mei Duh; Ming Hui Wei; Joseph P. Albanesi; Cheng Chi Lee; Michael I. Lerman; John D. Minna
Cancer Research | 1996
Ming Hui Wei; Farida Latif; Scott Bader; Jeou Yuan Chen; Fuh Mei Duh; Yoshitaka Sekido; Cheng Chi Lee; Laura Geil; Igor Kuzmin; Eugene R. Zabarovsky; George Klein; Berton Zbar; John D. Minna; Michael I. Lerman
Oncogene | 1994
Yoshitaka Sekido; Scott Bader; Farida Latif; Gnarra; Adi F. Gazdar; Linehan Wm; Berton Zbar; Michael I. Lerman; John D. Minna
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 1988
Farida Latif; Robert C. Moschel; Kari Hemminki; Anthony Dipple
Archive | 1999
Michael I. Lerman; Farida Latif; Ming-Hui Wei; Fuh-Mei Duh; John D. Minna; Yoshitaka Sekido; Boning Gao
Archive | 1994
Michael I. Lerman; Farida Latif; Berton Zbar; Marston Linehan
Archive | 1997
William M. Linehan; I Lerman; Farida Latif; Berton Zbar