Publication | Open Access
A highly conserved repeated chromosomal sequence in the radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans SARK
15
Citations
9
References
1991
Year
GeneticsBacteriologyMolecular BiologyRadioresistant Bacterium DeinococcusMolecular GeneticsDamage-inducible GeneGenomicsGene StructureDna SequencingSequence AnalysisGenome StructureDna ReplicationMolecular MicrobiologySark Genomic DnaBioinformaticsDyad SymmetriesChromosomal SequenceBiologyNatural SciencesMicrobiologyMedicineMicrobial Genetics
A DNA fragment containing a portion of a DNA damage-inducible gene from Deinococcus radiodurans SARK hybridized to numerous fragments of SARK genomic DNA because of a highly conserved repetitive chromosomal element. The element is of variable length, ranging from 150 to 192 bp, depending on the absence or presence of one or two 21-bp sequences located internally. A putative translational start site of the damage-inducible gene is within the reiterated element. The element contains dyad symmetries that suggest modes of transcriptional and/or translational control.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1