رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Initiation Signals in Viral Gene Expression "


Document Type : BL
Record Number : 728617
Doc. No : b548369
Main Entry : edited by Aaron J. Shatkin.
Title & Author : Initiation Signals in Viral Gene Expression\ edited by Aaron J. Shatkin.
Publication Statement : Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1981
Series Statement : Current topics in microbiology and immunology, 93.
ISBN : 3642681239
: : 3642681255
: : 9783642681233
: : 9783642681257
Contents : Elucidating Mechanisms of Eukaryotic Genetic Expression by Studying Animal Viruses --;Regulation of Viral Transcription and DNA Replication by the SV40 Large T Antigen --;Transcriptional Control Regions: Nucleotide Sequence Requirements for Initiation by RNA Polymerase II and III --;Splicing and the Regulation of Viral Gene Expression --;Mechanism of mRNA Recognition by Eukaryotic Ribosomes During Initiation of Protein Synthesis --;Priming of Influenza Viral RNA Transcription by Capped Heterologous RNAs --;Origin and Replication of Defective Interfering Particles --;Indexed in Current Contents.
Abstract : Elucidating Mechanisms of Eukaryotic Genetic Expression by Studying Animal Viruses AARON 1. SHATIGN* Eukaryotic genetic expression is carefully regulated. Normal cell growth and division, tisƯ sue differentiation, and organism development all depend on a strictly ordered progresƯ sion of specific events. Perturbation of the control of these processes, for example by exƯ posure to harmful chemicals or infection with viruses leads to aberrant forms of metaƯ bolism, often resulting in malignancies and cell death. One of the most challenging problems in biology is to derme at the molecular level the mechanisms that govern gene function in higher organisms, including ultimately man. This goal serves to unify the diverse efforts of many investigators, whether studying the precise patterns of embryoƯ genesis, the loss of control that occurs during neoplastic growth or the redirection of biosynthetic pathways in virus-infected cells. Recently there has been remarkable and exciting progress toward understanding the molecular biology of eukaryotic expression. Much of this rapidly increasing new inforƯ mation has come from studies of animal virus systems. Just as investigations of the relatively simple, rapidly assayed, and easily manipulated bacteriophages lead to basic discoveries about prokaryotic cells, analyses of animal viruses and their interactions with host cells have provided fundamental information about how eukaryotic nucleic acids are organized for regulated replication, transcription, and translation. For example, the small genome of SV, like cellular DNA in chromatin, is associated with histones to 40 form nucleosomal arrays (Griffin 1975).
Subject : Medical virology.
Subject : Medicine.
Subject : Microbiology.
LC Classification : ‭QR46‬‭.E358 1981‬
Added Entry : Aaron J Shatkin
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