戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 replisomes easily bypassed R-loops on either template strand.
2 er: when the G-rich strand serves as the non-template strand.
3 licase within TFIIH to generate the unpaired template strand.
4 ese pyrimidine analogues when present in the template strand.
5 y incorporated opposite 5-nitroindole in the template strand.
6 h in the absence and the presence of the non-template strand.
7 unit caused by steric repulsion with the DNA template strand.
8 ly around the extrahelical nucleotide on the template strand.
9 ize dGTP and dATP when tC and tCo are in the template strand.
10 NA through the complex and/or around the DNA template strand.
11 elted promoter through interactions with the template strand.
12 and while maintaining association with their template strand.
13 se H, which removes mRNA hybridized with the template strand.
14 cated in proximity to the 5' overhang of the template strand.
15 otides are incorporated in register with the template strand.
16  5' end and to lesions located in the intact template strand.
17 A that form opposite from DNA lesions on the template strand.
18 timulated by a short oligo(U) stretch in the template strand.
19 hanism that involves misalignment of the DNA template strand.
20 base pair in which 7-deazaguanine was in the template strand.
21 t attributable to the presence of MeG on the template strand.
22 imer termini lack complementary bases in the template strand.
23  interact with phosphates 7 and 8 of the DNA template strand.
24 erted opposite the complementary base in the template strand.
25 ms a stable RNA:DNA hybrid (R-loop) with its template strand.
26 se is more sensitive to substitutions in the template strand.
27 ives cross-linking to the +1 position on the template strand.
28 r strand than the equivalent position in the template strand.
29 hich RT disrupts the RNA helix to access the template strand.
30  initiation that provides RNAP access to the template strand.
31 rastrand d(GpTpG) cross-links located on the template strand.
32 e RNA transcript and re-anneals with the non-template strand.
33 -1 RT contains key contacts for the incoming template strand.
34 ymerase to isomerize and engage with the DNA template strand.
35 sponse to the presence or absence of the non-template strand.
36 owed full-length replication of the adducted template strand.
37 promoter opening and trapping of the DNA non-template strand.
38 trand (<4%) with variable methylation on the template strand.
39 rpin may also help displace the RNA from the template strand.
40 articular, where and when TLS occurs on each template strand.
41 quences binding to 10 +/- 2 locations on the template strand.
42 lication forks encountering obstacles on the template strand.
43 both photoproducts occurs exclusively on the template strand.
44 led by sequence-specific elements in the non-template strand.
45 ed with transcription, specifically with the template strand.
46 l position to interact with the upstream non-template strand.
47 cap guanine with an opposing cytosine in the template strand.
48 cceptor probe with high efficiency on an RNA template strand.
49 est at damaged sites to permit repair of the template strand.
50 one by the latter enzyme as it traverses the template strand.
51 are brought together by hybridization to DNA template strands.
52 forks that have encountered obstacles on the template strands.
53 s inhibited by the presence of uracil in DNA template strands.
54 dification and the phosphate backbone of the templating strand.
55 n DNA gaps with unrepaired UV lesions in the template strand act both as substrates for translesion p
56             A single-strand break in the non-template strand adjacent to the G-rich stretch dramatica
57 ase advances one nucleotide space on the DNA template strand after a correct nucleotide is incorporat
58 ynucleotide opposite an abasic lesion in the template strand, albeit slowly.
59 play a crucial role in RNA priming by aiding template strand alignment in the active site for high-af
60 piral of ATPase domains that tracks only the template strand, allowing recognition of both RNA and DN
61 scription complex because removal of the non-template strand also disrupts transcription bubble reann
62 netics of polymerization with 8-oxodG in the template strand also revealed relatively low fidelity in
63 tite substrate containing a quencher-labeled template strand, an unlabeled primer and a fluorophore-l
64  mechanism in which APOBEC3G binds the viral template strand and blocks reverse transcriptase-catalys
65 e of two replication initiation sites at the template strand and evidence for primer translocation as
66 polymerase) can efficiently bypass tC on the template strand and incorporate deoxyribose-triphosphate
67 n; the primer is elongated to the end of the template strand and is then further extended with a non-
68 This DNA is already methylated by Dam on the template strand and later becomes fully methylated; aber
69 reat ape inversions by using single-cell DNA template strand and long-read sequencing.
70              Abasic substitutions in the non-template strand and promoter sequence changes were made
71              The assay uses a 5' end-labeled template strand and relies on an increase in the polariz
72 DNA polymerases predict contacts between the template strand and S769, F771, and R841, and our DNA bi
73 pposite nucleoside analogues inserted into a template strand and subsequent extension of the newly sy
74  that the distance between the 5' end of the template strand and the 5' end of the primer decreases b
75  DNA substrates labeled at the 5' end of the template strand and the 5' end of the primer with the fl
76 tions suggest that in the absence of the non-template strand and the lid, a new channel opens within
77 by controlling dNTP-induced movements of the template strand and the primer-terminal 3'-OH as the enz
78 d, where the RNA gets separated from the DNA template-strand and double-stranded upstream DNA is form
79 ionalized with peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) (templating strand and catalyst-functionalized strand, re
80 rather than (CAG)(43), comprised the leading template strand, and complete rather than partial deleti
81  interacts with the incoming nucleotide, the template strand, and key active-site residues from other
82 ynthesized DNA across discontinuities in the template strand, and nuclease activity removed a limited
83 og and other substitutions at -11 in the non-template strand, and sigma70 variants bearing amino acid
84 tly, a dGh/dIa site was synthesized in a DNA template strand, and standing start primer extension stu
85 outinely stall at lesions encountered on the template strand, and translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) is
86 ers and activated monomers can still bind to template strands, and template-directed primer extension
87                                   Although a template strand AP site impedes DNA synthesis, translesi
88  In this initial unstable "open" complex the template strand appears correctly positioned in the acti
89 G and benzo[c]phenanthrene-dA adducts in the template strand are durable roadblocks to POL elongation
90 site, wherein both ends of the discontinuous template strand are stabilized by a hydrogen bonding net
91 ation sequencing technologies is that single template strands are amplified clonally onto a solid sur
92 n all sigma(70) family factors, with the non-template strand around position -4 relative to the trans
93 ir with its template DNA, displacing the non-template strand as ssDNA and forming a structure called
94 by incorporating three deoxycytidines in the template strand as the first 3 bases to be copied by the
95 o NAD+ does not depend on the -1 base of the template strand, as was suggested earlier.
96 ich is located in close proximity to the non-template strand at promoter position -18.
97  engage with the flipped out base of the non-template strand at the +1 site.
98 lowing the shortened primer to rebind to the template strand at the pol site and incorporate the corr
99   Pol lambda makes limited contacts with the template strand at the polymerase active site, and super
100 teraction of the RNAP sigma subunit with non-template strand bases of a conserved -10 element (consen
101  has been assumed that RecA binds to the DNA template strand being copied.
102 s that concern the regulated transfer of the template strand between a preinsertion site and an inser
103  and exhibit differential preference for the template strand between exons and introns.
104                         Force exerted on the template strand biases the complexes toward the pre-tran
105                            UV lesions in the template strand block the DNA replication machinery.
106                Unrepaired DNA lesions in the template strand block the replication fork.
107                                  By defining template-strand blocking as a mechanism for inhibition,
108 are asymmetrically distributed: transcribed (template) strand breaks downstream of bp-14 (relative to
109 ype TFIIIB generated by certain transcribed (template) strand breaks near the transcriptional start s
110                Our data suggest that the non-template strand bulge is extruded into solvent in comple
111 omplexes containing a 5-mer RNA, whereas the template strand bulge remains within the template strand
112 e targeting vector can be displaced from the template strand by an active T7 phage RNA polymerase.
113 ere, we report a method for folding a custom template strand by binding individual staple sequences t
114                             A gap in the non-template strand cannot be bypassed.
115                                A nick on the template strand cannot be bypassed.
116 ence of 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) lesions in the template strand cause the high-fidelity (HiFi) DNA polym
117 f synthetic promoters in which the preferred template strand 'CC' initiation sequence was moved away
118 repairing mispairs comprised of loops on the template strand compared to loops on the primer strand.
119  transcription templates with RNA in the non-template strand confirm that the source of the ssDNA cof
120                                          The template strand contained a nine-nucleotide overhang and
121 ATase activity was observed if the opposite (template) strand contained a short 5' oligo(U) sequence,
122                                       If the template strand contains a short sequence of G residues,
123  data suggest that the following base on the template strand dictates the addition of the mutated bas
124 ires the recognition of a single strand by a templated strand dimer.
125 ingle-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB) for template strand DNA in the presence of DNA polymerase th
126                     We discuss the impact of template strand DNA modification on the activities of DN
127 ate to the fully opened DNA and blocking the template-strand DNA from reaching the active site in the
128 14 base pairs of the DNA duplex and load the template-strand DNA into the RNAP active site.
129 ilar to what was observed previously for the template strand downstream from the primer terminus.
130 bypass potentially deadly DNA lesions on the template strand during DNA replication.
131 tly blocked by bulky chemical lesions on the template strand during DNA replication.
132  to the newly synthesized strand and not the template strand during DNA synthesis.
133  of Loop1 and to juxtapose the discontinuous template strand during NHEJ of incompatible ends.
134 spectroscopy reveals a reorganization of the template strand during this process, and molecular model
135 ed to initiate DNA synthesis on the parental template strands during DNA replication.
136 elements are capable of targeting one of the template strands during DNA replication.
137  bind to and unbind from transiently exposed template strands during DNA synthesis.
138 rescent reporter 2-aminopurine (2-AP) on the template strand, either at the templating position oppos
139 er demonstrate that Rad54 disrupts the donor template strands, enabling the search to take place with
140           We report that circularizing a DNA template strand encoding a pre-microRNA hairpin mimic ca
141                 Although the single-stranded template strand extends in opposite directions from 3' a
142 tes DNA polymerase I to successfully inhibit template strand extension.
143 erall, the data are most consistent with the template strand following a path over the fingers subdom
144 his protocol does not require synthesis of a template strand for adenylation.
145 cerevisiae, sgRNA/dCas9 targeting to the non-template strand for antisense transcription results in a
146 evealed a preference for a purine in the non-template strand for tsp in both promoters.
147 ascent RNA intermittent reannealing with the template strand, for prolonged access of AID.
148  network of Pol II interactions with the non-template strand forms a rigid domain with the trigger lo
149  stall replication on encountering uracil in template strands, four bases ahead of the primer-templat
150 into the center of the clamp and exit of the template strand from the complex.
151 of an adenine (A) opposite the 8-oxoG on the template strand, generating an A:8-oxoG mispair.
152 )-EtdT or O(4)-EtdT at a defined site in the template strand, herein we examined the effects of these
153                           Methylation on the template strand, however, does not increase RFX1 complex
154 own that Afu Pol-D activity is slowed by the template strand hypoxanthine, extending previous results
155 e61 residue, which is thought to contact the template strand immediately ahead of the dNTP-binding si
156 ow DNA polymerases to overcome breaks in the template strand in an error-prone manner.
157                     The critical role of the template strand in approximating the reactive 3'-OH and
158 wever, whereas I-HmuI and I-HmuII cleave the template strand in exon 2, I-TwoI cleaves the coding str
159 e center-proximal contacts stabilize the DNA template strand in the active center cleft and/or positi
160 helix-hairpin-helix motif interacts with the template strand in the downstream duplex eight base-pair
161 be double-stranded (ds) to function, the non-template strand in the initiation region is dispensable,
162 e-230 in limiting the internalization of the template strand in the polymerization active site is dis
163 that interact with the ssDNA overhang of the template strand in the pre-polymerase ternary complex, w
164 on', whereby transferring information from a template strand in the presence of its complementary str
165 for NPH I is the upstream portion of the non-template strand in the transcription bubble.
166  facilitates DNA melting by trapping the non-template strand in the unwound conformation.
167 ) or the 5th/6th nucleotide (Arg(47)) of the template strand in the upstream duplex portion counting
168 leotide and closed protein conformation, the template strand in the vicinity of the active site has s
169 left and then separating the nontemplate and template strands in the region surrounding the start sit
170 Complementarity between the template and non-template strands in this region is also required for NPH
171 anganate footprinting on the nontemplate and template strands indicates that when polymerase is in a
172 alls upon encountering an abasic site in the template strand, indicating that, like many replicative
173  downstream template base, on a "looped out" template strand instead of mispairing opposite a next av
174                                  Loss of the template strand interaction, Q849A, resulted in the inab
175     Our results indicate that the primer and template strand interactions of the Klenow polymerase wi
176 rand interactions, while variant Q849A lacks template strand interactions.
177  and play a role in directing the melted DNA template strand into the RNA polymerase active site.
178 protein/DNA interactions that direct the DNA template strand into the RNAP active site.
179                                   To convert template strands into a compatible state for attachment
180 ectures and that the organization of the non-template strand is a fundamental characteristic of R-loo
181                                   The entire template strand is at the bend angle Theta(TP) = 85 +/-
182 t intercalate into the growing duplex as the template strand is copied into XNA.
183 ities: it acts as a pseudo-template when the template strand is discontinuous or unavailable, whilst
184 ith DNA reveal that the 5'-trajectory of the template strand is dramatically altered as it exits the
185 ires that the promoter DNA is melted and the template strand is loaded into the active site of the RN
186 NAP has been displaced until a lesion in the template strand is located.
187         This extent of protection on the non-template strand is similar to what was observed previous
188 se enzymes catalyze DNA replication when the template strand is subjected to a stretching force.
189 e level of gene repair is higher than if the template strand is targeted.
190 ncement of gene repair observed when the non-template strand is targeted.
191          We find that the coding base on the template strand is unperturbed by the binding of incorre
192  stable duplex formation between product and template strands is not required for template-dependent
193 ed G residue is present at the 3'-end of the template strand, it is copied regiospecifically in the p
194 loop formation by the nascent transcript and template strand, leading to suppression of transcription
195      In the first cycle, misalignment of the template strand leads to incorporation of a nucleotide t
196 nd Y-family DNA polymerases in response to a template strand lesion.
197 polymerases can extend primer strands across template strand lesions that stall replicative polymeras
198 oops, while maintaining efficient repair of "template strand" loops.
199 specifically discriminates against tC in the template strand may suggest that DinB discriminates agai
200 predominantly deletion errors as a result of template-strand misalignment.
201 acts the DNA primer strand and positions the template strand near the RNase H active site, influencin
202 stranded transcription bubble, and selects a template-strand nucleotide to serve as the transcription
203 interactions with individual -10 element non-template strand nucleotides and indicate that recognitio
204 RecA filaments assembled in cis on a damaged template strand obstructing translesion DNA synthesis de
205 nopurine (2AP) as a fluorescent probe in the template strand of a 13/20mer primer/template (D) to det
206                  pdC substitution within the template strand of a DNA duplex does not appear to signi
207                    The cleavage of Gh in the template strand of a replication or transcription bubble
208 es the removal of noncoding lesions from the template strand of active genes, and hence contributes t
209 stranded DNA; it binds preferentially to the template strand of active mtDNA ori sequences in vitro;
210 l (NGN) domain of Spt5 that contacts the non-template strand of DNA both upstream of RNAPII and in th
211 d that residue rtV173 is located beneath the template strand of HBV nucleic acid near the active site
212 nd various degrees of similarity for the non-template strand of introns in the human genome.
213          Uniquely, the nvRNAP recognizes the template strand of its promoters and is capable of speci
214 e polymerization either by repositioning the template strand of nucleic acid or by affecting other re
215 is the highly conserved -11A base in the non-template strand of the -10 promoter region.
216 he transcript to slip back and pair with the template strand of the DNA at a new register before tran
217 n the nascent RNA remains base-paired to the template strand of the DNA before it is displaced and th
218 strand template but not appreciably with the template strand of the DNA stem greater than two nucleot
219 1 of pol beta lies in close proximity to the template strand of the DNA.
220  detected CSR-associated ssDNA breaks in the template strand of the H chain alpha switch region, the
221  mouse brain and is transcribed from the non-template strand of the Nos1 locus.
222 0) RNA polymerase (RNAP) holoenzyme with non-template strand of the open promoter complex transcripti
223 at resolution of G4 structures on the G-rich template strand of the telomere requires some overlappin
224           Surprisingly, the template and non-template strands of the DNA at the upstream edge of the
225  a triplex between the nascent and fold-back template strands of the repeat.
226 r separation of the nascent RNA from the DNA template strand or transcription termination.
227  excision of G(O) might misdirect MMR to the template strand, our findings suggest that OGG1 activity
228 s, together with a molecular modeling of the template strand overhang in Klenow fragment, indicated i
229  promoter, Fe(2+) cleavage assays to monitor template strand positions near the active-site, and Bpa
230 L may be linked to interactions with the non-template strand, possibly in a synchronized ratcheting m
231                                    While the template strand promotes destabilization via a weak olig
232                The mechanism of this unique "template-strand proof-reading" has been studied using eq
233 lts obtained with a force applied to the DNA template strand provide insights into the effect of the
234 tion via a weak oligo(rU:dA) hybrid, the non-template strand provides distinct sequence-specific dest
235 dividual positions during one pass along the template strand ranged from 10% to 24.5% without optimiz
236  We report that a G-rich sequence in the non-template strand reduces the yield of T7 RNA polymerase t
237 her than the PCR, enriches for fully ligated template strands, reducing the incidence of duplicate se
238 ly down to 88%, whereas crRNAs targeting the template strand repress expression down to 8%.
239 luding likely specific interactions with the template-strand residues of the -10 element.
240                            Breaks in the non-template strand result in much weaker blockage signals e
241 he RNAP binding affinity to template and non-template strand segments of the transcription bubble dow
242 am edge of the RNA-DNA hybrid, where the DNA template strand separates from the RNA transcript and re
243 ements show that Y261 plays a role in primer-template strand separation.
244     We have previously developed a novel DNA template strand sequencing technique, called Strand-seq,
245 s new probe at specific positions in the non-template strand shows clearly that the elongation bubble
246 C37 is required for this function of the non-template strand signal.
247 her show that interactions between sigma and template-strand single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) preorganize
248 bda) generates single-base deletions through template-strand slippage within short repetitive DNA reg
249  as frameshift mutations) resulting from DNA template-strand slippage.
250 ling suggested that N265D leads to a loss of template strand-specific hydrogen bonding, indicating th
251 rand single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) preorganize template-strand ssDNA to engage the RNAP active center.
252 g associated frameshift error rates based on template-strand stability, the close connection between
253 ects at Airn is dictated by the extruded non-template strand, suggesting that R-loops possess intrins
254 mote DNA lesion bypass in vitro through the 'template-strand switch' mechanism.
255                                 Detection of template strand switching in the middle of an inverted r
256 ster strands, possibly by means of transient template strand switching or copy choice.
257  26 viruses recovered, 16 showed evidence of template strand switching, from minus-strand genome DNA
258 is not known but could perhaps result from a template-strand-switching, or copy choice, process.
259 AG, which occurs much more frequently on the template strand than on the putatively displaced nontemp
260  single-strand loops on either the primer or template strand that are subsequently processed by the M
261  preferentially removes DNA lesions from the template strand that block translocation of RNA polymera
262 is imputed to stack on the nucleobase of the template strand that includes the 1st bp of the downstre
263 c IgG antibody to two antigen-conjugated DNA templating strands that triggers a chemical reaction tha
264                                       On the template strand, the DNase I downstream boundary of this
265 ite either 5- or 6-nitrobenzimidazole in the template strand, the enzymes did incorporate the analogu
266 ormer opens the genome duplex to isolate the template strand; the latter splits the emerging template
267 dentified during translocation of single DNA template strands through a modified Mycobacterium smegma
268 s from the displaced RNA re-annealing to the template strand thus forcing the primer terminus to beco
269 ructure, and (b) Arg(841) interacts with the template strand to achieve the optimal strand separation
270 ring DNA synthesis, and bypasses them on the template strand to cause deletion.
271 beit at reduced efficiency of 7%, on the non-template strand to continue rolling circle DNA synthesis
272         DNA polymerases use an uninterrupted template strand to direct synthesis of DNA.
273 bsent in the vRNA promoter) allowed the cRNA template strand to reach further into the active site, l
274 , and 3) insert extra bases in the primer or template strands to mimic frameshift intermediates.
275 imer terminus or in the coding region of the template strand, to monitor and interpret conformational
276            The polymerase tracking along the template strand traps the C(6) to prevent lock formation
277 the template strand bulge remains within the template strand tunnel, exerting stress on interactions
278 trate here that altering the topology of the template strand two nucleotides ahead of the catalytic c
279 ubble (-11 to +2), but unusual reactivity of template strand upstream cytosines (-12, -14, and -15) o
280               Pol D appears to interact with template strand uracil irrespective of its distance ahea
281 eal family B DNA polymerases bind tightly to template-strand uracil and stall replication on encounte
282 n a specialised pocket that binds tightly to template-strand uracil, causing the stalling of DNA repl
283 ase stalled at a noncoding lesion in the DNA template strand, uses the energy from ATP hydrolysis to
284 ectly to repeat sequences; targeting the non-template strand was more effective.
285  of incorporation of 8-oxo-dG with dA in the template strand was reduced 500-fold.
286       The promoter and exon 1 regions of the template strand were completely demethylated, whereas re
287                      Five different types of template strands were used: homogeneous (1) RNA or (2) D
288 vailable purine 2-3 bp downstream on the non-template strand whereas deleting a single bp at position
289  also forms a crystal contact with the ssDNA template strand, which binds into the protein-binding po
290                     It may interact with the template strand, which sets the location of the transcri
291 A induced the formation of a CAG loop in the template strand, which was skipped over by DNA polymeras
292 resence or absence of discontinuities in the template strand, which will in turn determine the final
293  adduct is oriented toward the 5'-end of the template strand while the (-)-trans adduct lies toward t
294                 Because Pif1 moves along the template strand with a 5'-3'-directionality, head-on col
295 rate any dNMP or rNMP opposite oxo-dG in the template strand with manganese as cofactor, with a kinet
296  of the melted dsDNA promoter also align the template strand within the active site for efficient RNA
297 o TFIIF was dependent on the sequence of the template strand within the single-stranded bubble.
298 n on templates that lack portions of the non-template strand within the transcription bubble showed t
299 A cofactor is obtained from the unpaired non-template strand within the transcription bubble.
300  placement of the 3' end of the transcribed (template) strand within the confines of the transcriptio

 
Page Top