2001
A consensus DNA recognition motif for two KDWK transcription factors identifies flexible-length, CpG-methylation sensitive cognate binding sites in the majority of human promoters11Edited by M. Yaniv
Burnett E, Christensen J, Tattersall P. A consensus DNA recognition motif for two KDWK transcription factors identifies flexible-length, CpG-methylation sensitive cognate binding sites in the majority of human promoters11Edited by M. Yaniv. Journal Of Molecular Biology 2001, 314: 1029-1039. PMID: 11743720, DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.2000.5198.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAmino Acid MotifsBase SequenceBinding SitesConsensus SequenceCpG IslandsDimerizationDNADNA MethylationDNA-Binding ProteinsElectrophoretic Mobility Shift AssayHeLa CellsHumansKineticsMolecular WeightPromoter Regions, GeneticProtein BindingProtein SubunitsResponse ElementsSubstrate SpecificityTranscription FactorsConceptsParvovirus initiation factorTranscription factorsDNA recognition motifDNA-binding heterodimersParvoviral DNA replicationTranscriptional start siteCellular transcription factorsEukaryotic genomesProtein complexesDNA replicationM. YanivInitiation factorsStart siteCpG methylationHuman promotersRecognition motifCytosine residuesRecombinant baculovirusSelection experimentsElement upstreamC residuesHeLa cellsPromoterHeterodimersHost factors
1999
Two New Members of the Emerging KDWK Family of Combinatorial Transcription Modulators Bind as a Heterodimer to Flexibly Spaced PuCGPy Half-Sites
Christensen J, Cotmore S, Tattersall P. Two New Members of the Emerging KDWK Family of Combinatorial Transcription Modulators Bind as a Heterodimer to Flexibly Spaced PuCGPy Half-Sites. Molecular And Cellular Biology 1999, 19: 7741-7750. PMID: 10523663, PMCID: PMC84824, DOI: 10.1128/mcb.19.11.7741.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAmino Acid MotifsAmino Acid SequenceBinding SitesCloning, MolecularDimerizationDNA, ComplementaryDNA-Binding ProteinsGC Rich SequenceHeLa CellsHumansMolecular Sequence DataMultigene FamilyNuclear ProteinsParvovirusPromoter Regions, GeneticProtein BindingReceptors, TransferrinRecombinant ProteinsReplication OriginSequence Homology, Amino AcidTranscription FactorsTyrosine TransaminaseConceptsParvovirus initiation factorPromoter activation assaysParvovirus DNA replicationE-box motifAmino acid identityTransferrin receptor promoterResponse element-binding proteinCyclic AMP response element binding proteinElement-binding proteinHeLa factorsAMP response element binding proteinTranscriptional modulatorDNA replicationHuman cDNAAcid identityInitiation factorsRegulatory elementsDEAF-1Recombinant baculovirusHalf sitesPromoter regionComplex bindsReceptor promoterHost cellsComplex consisting
1994
An asymmetric nucleotide in the parvoviral 3′ hairpin directs segregation of a single active origin of DNA replication.
Cotmore S, Tattersall P. An asymmetric nucleotide in the parvoviral 3′ hairpin directs segregation of a single active origin of DNA replication. The EMBO Journal 1994, 13: 4145-4152. PMID: 8076610, PMCID: PMC395337, DOI: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06732.x.Peer-Reviewed Original Research