Extractions: Add definition Charity('US') Mentioned in References in periodicals archive No references found Altman explains her emphasis on tight time limits on projects: "The time it takes to do anything expands exponentially with the amount of time you allow yourself to do it. Faster is better by Vasilash, Gary S. In the year I graduated, 1975, it felt like Altman presented me with the best possible gift: his masterpiece, ``Nashville. HIS MOVIES CHANGED LIVES INNOVATIVE AUTEUR WILL LEAVE LASTING IMPACT by Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Extractions: Fenyong Liu No. 207547 filed on 1994-03-07 Acellular exponential or geometric amplification (e.g., PCR, etc.) Polynucleotide (e.g., RNA, DNA, etc.) DNA or RNA fragments or modified forms thereof (e.g., genes, etc.) Involving transferase Involving nucleic acid Acellular exponential or geometric amplification (e.g., PCR, etc.) Polynucleotide (e.g., RNA, DNA, etc.) DNA or RNA fragments or modified forms thereof (e.g., genes, etc.) Cleavage of targeted RNA by RNAase P It has been discovered that any RNA can be targeted for cleavage by RNAase P from eukaryotic cells, for example, human RNAase P, using a suitably designed oligoribonucleotide ("external guide sequence", or EGS) to form a hybrid with the target RNA, thereby creating a substrate for cleavage by RNAase P in vitro. The EGS hydrogen bonds to the targeted RNA to form a partial tRNA like structure including the aminoacyl acceptor stem, the T stem and loop, and part of the D stem. The most efficient EGS with human RNAase P is the EGS in which the anticodon stem and loop was deleted. Modifications can also be made within the T-loop. Methods are also disclosed to randomly select and to express a suitable EGS in vivo to make a selected RNA a target for cleavage by the host cell RNAase P, thus preventing expression of the function of the target RNA. The methods and compositions should be useful to prevent the expression of disease-causing genes in vivo.
Extractions: Classification: Blu-Ray: Finding Neverland A For Andromeda - Series 1 / The Andromeda Breakthrough - Series 1 Miracle Maker Shampoo ... A Decade Under The Influence Blu-Ray: Finding Neverland (2004) Marc Forster Johnny Depp, Radha Mitchell, Julie Christie, Kate Winslet, Freddie Highmore, Joe Prospero, Dustin Hoffman A For Andromeda - Series 1 / The Andromeda Breakthrough - Series 1 (1961) Susan Hampshire,Peter Halliday,Esmond Knight,Mary Morris,Noel Johnson,Patricia Kneale,Julie Christie It's a story that has been told for 2000 years - but never like this! The Miracle Maker combines lifelike 3D model animation with graphically striking 2D animation in this brilliant new portrayal of the life of Jesus, told through the eyes of a child.Set ... Miracle Maker (2000) Derek H. Hayes,Stanislav Sokolov
Sidney Altman ZoomInfo Business People Information View sidney altman s professional background on ZoomInfo, the largest index of people in business in the world. Find who you re looking for at ZoomInfo. http://www.zoominfo.com/people/Altman_Sidney_1411096.aspx
The Road To RNase P - Nature Structural & Molecular Biology sidney altman is in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and In 1989, sidney altman and Thomas R. Cech shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their http://www.nature.com/nsmb/journal/v7/n10/abs/nsb1000_827.html
Extractions: @import "/nsmb/style.css"; nature.com homepage Login Search This journal All of nature.com Advanced search Journal home Archive Table of Contents ... For librarians NPG Resources Nature Nature Cell Biology Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology The EMBO Journal ... Browse all publications History Nature Structural Biology doi:10.1038/79566 Sidney Altman Sidney Altman is in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Yale University, Kline Biology Tower, 219 Prospect Street, New Haven, Conneticut 06520-8103, USA. sidney.altman@yale.edu In 1989, Sidney Altman and Thomas R. Cech shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their discovery of catalytic properties of RNA. Cech was studying the splicing of RNA in a unicellular organism called Tetrahymena thermophila. He found that the precursor RNA could splice in vitro in the absence of proteins. Altman studied ribonuclease P (RNase P), a ribonucleoprotein that is a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of tRNA. RNase P is an RNA processing endonuclease that specifically cleaves precursors of tRNA, releasing 5' precursor sequences and mature tRNAs. RNase P is involved in processing all species of tRNA and is present in all cells and organelles that carry out tRNA synthesis. What follows is a personal recollection by Altman of how he came to study this remarkable enzyme.
PUBLIC -//American Philosophical Society Library//TEXT(USPAAV The most extensive body of correspondence consists of numerous email exchanges with sidney altman, a close friend and 1989 Nobel laureate in chemistry, http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/g/goad.xml
Extractions: PUBLIC "-//American Philosophical Society Library//TEXT(US::PAAV::Ms Coll 114:: Walter Goad Papers)//EN" "goad.xml" Walter B. Goad Papers rsc American Philosophical Society EAD tagging December 2001. ENG Walter B. Goad Papers American Philosophical Society English Walter Goad Papers Ms Coll 114 6 linear feet American Philosophical Society 105 South Fifth Street Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 A physicist with the Theoretical Division of Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Walter Goad became interested in molecular biology in the mid-1960s, devoting nearly all of his research to the analysis, storage and retrieval of information relating to nucleic acid sequences by the early 1970s. He was among the founders of GenBank, the world's first nucleic acid database, and was influential in the development of computational techniques for the analysis of DNA sequences. In the late 1980s, he served on the steering committee overseeing the establishment of the Human Genome Project. The Goad Papers relate primarily to the establishment and early operation of GenBank, the early phases of the Human Genome Project, and, more generally, to Goad's role as godfather of the new field of bioinformatics. Walter Goad in the Andes near Portillo, Chile, March 2000
Sidney Altman - Search Results - MSN Encarta altman, sidney, born in 1939, Canadianborn American chemist, molecular biologist and Nobel laureate. altman discovered that ribonucleic acid (RNA). http://ca.encarta.msn.com/Sidney_Altman.html
Extractions: var s_account="msnportalencartacaen"; Home Hotmail Spaces Video ... more Hotmail Messenger My Page Sympatico Mail Autos Careers Classifieds Entertainment ... More Reference Thesaurus Translation Multimedia Other Resources Top-10 List Language Help Products Guides ... Join Now Searched for ' Sidney Altman' Articles Sidney Altman Altman, Sidney , born in 1939, Canadian-born American chemist, molecular biologist and Nobel laureate. Altman discovered that ribonucleic acid (RNA)... ... , city in the southern Nebraska panhandle, the seat of Cheyenne County, situated on Lodgepole Creek, 187 km (116 mi) west of the... See all search results in Articles (79) Sidney Altman Sidney Poitier Sidney Bechet Sydney Harbour ... Map of Sydney (Australia) See all search results in Maps (24) Colleges Hampden-Sydney College PO Box 667 Phone: 308 254-5450 Fax: 308 254-7444 See all search results in Colleges (6) Windows Live® Search Results Sidney Altman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Sidney Altman (born May 7 , 1939 in Montreal, Quebec ) is a molecular biologist , who is currently the Sterling Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and ... Sidney Altman Cyber encyclopedia of Jewish history and culture that covers everythingfrom anti-Semitism to Zionism. It includes a glossary, bibliography of web sites and books, biographies ... ... Sidney Altman Sidney Altman was born in Montreal in 1939. Sidney obtained a B.Sc. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1960 and his Ph.D. from the University of ... See all search results in Windows Live® Search Results
309aindex 1..21 Your browser may not have a PDF reader available. Google recommends visiting our text version of this document. http://www.sciencemag.org/feature/data/309aindex.pdf