Date post: | 02-Jan-2017 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | truonghuong |
View: | 219 times |
Download: | 0 times |
Back MatterSource: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,Vol. 95, No. 14 (Jul. 7, 1998), pp. ix-xivPublished by: National Academy of SciencesStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/45769 .
Accessed: 08/05/2014 11:34
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
.
National Academy of Sciences is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access toProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
http://www.jstor.org
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
AUTHOR INDI
Abeijon, C. 7888 Cherubini, E Acosta, J. A. 8280 Cheung, T. Acuto, 0. 8193 Chidgey, M. Aktas, H. 8280 Chou, T.-C. Alexander, L. D. 8098 Chowdhary, Allen, H. 7866 Ciechanover, Allman, D. 8187 Qiftqioglu, N Anantharaman, T. S. 8046 Clarke, C. Andino, R. 8216 Clarke, V. Andrews, M. T. 8392 Cluzeaud, F. Arai, Y. 8153 Coffman, R. Ashcroft, F. M. 8387 Collins, W. E Aslund, F. 8404 Colucci, G. Aston, C. 8046 Connelly, J. Atfi, A. 8081 Copeland, N Axelrod, J. 8268 Cross, A. R. Babcock, G. T. 8020 Danishefsky, Baccus, S. A. 8345 Darst, S. A. Bachmair, A. 7904 Dash, P. K. Bacic, A. 7921 Dave, V. P. Balboa, M. A. 7951 Deisenhofer, Baldwin, I. T. 8113 Delecluse, H Balsinde, J. 7951 de Martin, R Baltz, D. 7963 Dembic, Z. Baltz, T. 7963 Demina, A. Band, H. 7927 Dennis, E. A Baradaran, K. 7957 De Petrocell Bataille, D. 8387 Depew, K. TV Becker, F. 7904 Deudon-Con Bercovich, B. 8058 Diamond, I. Berger, C. 8034 Dick, J. E. Berger, J. M. 7876 Diebold, R. Berretta, N. 8310 Di Marzo, V Besanqon, F. 8081 Dinauer, M. Bessia, C. 8108 Dixon, J. F. Bett, A. J. 7866 Domenici, N Betz, S. F. 7909 Dong, F. 8 Beutler, E. 8170 Dorrell, C. Bick, J.-A. 8404 Douglas, J. ( Bifulco, M. 8375 Dowling, J. I Bisogno, T. 8375 Drescher, B. Blackshaw, S. 8351 Dreyfus, H. Blau, C. A. 8093 Druker, B. Bleakman, D. 8328 Dulin, N. O. Bondeson, J. 8211 Ealy, A. D. Boot, J. 8328 Ebensperger Borisov, A. B. 7854 Edington, J. Bornmann, W. 8369 Ellegren, H. Botchan, M. R. 8414 Emery, D. V Bourgeade, M.-F. 8081 Erdel, M. I Bowen, C. M. 8392 Escalante, A Boyer, K. 7854 Estabrook, I Brennan, F. 8211 Everson, R. Bringaud, F. 7963 Ezashi, T. Brou, C. 8108 Falck, J. R. Brown, P. 8322 Falk, B. W. Brown, R. E. 8040 Fass, D. 78 Browne, K. 8211 Feldmann, NI Brust, P. 8328 Fernandez, I Budka, H. 8322 Fesik, S. W. Bunn, H. F. 7987 Figueredo, A Burnett, A. F. 8351 Filippone, E Burnett, P. E. 8351 Fintz, A.-C. Burt, A. 8414 Fischer, M. Cabin, D. 8153 Fitzky, B. U Camacho, S. A. 8262 Fluckiger, R Capellari, S. 8322 Fondell, J. E Carson, D. A. 7846 Forster, V. Caskey, C. T. 7866 Foxwell, B. Cayre, Y. E. 8081 Franlin, L. Celia, H. 8040 Fransen, M. Chan, D. 8369 Freeland, D Chen, S. G. 8322 Frick, D. N. Chen, S.-J. 8175 Fridolfsson, Chen, Y. 8404 Fried, V. A. Chen, Z. 8175 Frischmeyer Cheng, H. 8147 Fu, G. 817
:X, JULY 7, 1998
8310 Fu, Z.-Y. 7939 8257 Gabbay, M. 8334 8064 Gaffney, D. 8034 8369 Gage, F. H. 7999
3. 8147 Gajdusek, D. C. 8322 A. 8058 Gambetti, P. 8322
8274 Gan, 0. I. 8239 1211 Gao, Y. 8298 3046 Garrod, D. 8064
8075 Gelbart, T. 8170 L. 8233 George, A. L., Jr. 7843
,8124 Gespach, C. 8081 7860 Gil, E. B. 7999 C. 7969 Gilbert, D. J. 8205 G. 7898, 8147, 8205 Gill, P. S. 8257 7993 Gillard, S. 8328
S. J. 8369 Glossmann, H. 8181 7848 Golden, G. T. 8322 8339 Goldstein, D. B. 8119 8187 Gomyou, H. 8153 J. 8026 Gonda, D. K. 7898 .-J. 8245 Good, R. A. 8199
8211 Graham, F. L. 7866 8233 Gribble, F. M. 8387 8170 Grimaldi, M. 8268
7951 Gross-Mesilaty, S. 8058 s, L. 8375 Gu, B.-W. 8175 [. 8369 Gu, J. 7987, 8175 ibe, A. 8357 Gu, M. C. 7866
8262 Guillen, E. 7888 8239 Gunther, W. 8075 r. 7915 Gus-Mayer, S. 8398 . 8375 Hahlbrock, K. 8398 C. 7993 Hainfellner, J. 8322 8363 Halperin, J. A. 8280
[.R. 8310 Halverson, J. 8147 .35 Hammerschmidt, W. 8245 8239 Hampson, A. J. 8268 J. 8098 Han, Z.-G. 8175 . 8414 Hardy, R. R. 8187
8141 Harman, G. E. 7860 8357 Harosi, F. I. 8414
7927 Harpold, M. 8328 8098 Harrington, W. A., Jr. 8257
7882 Harris, E. A. S. 7909 C. 8233 Harrison, S. C. 7876 8046 Harwalkar, S. 8098 8147 Hauw, J. J. 8322
i. 8093 Hayes, E. 8034 181 He, K.-L. 8175 . A. 8124 Hedrick, J. 8205 ,. M. 8304 Hei, T. K. 8103 M. 8334 Helfrich, B. 8369 7882 Heron, L. 8387 8098 Hershko, A. 7898 8304 Hicks, D. 8357
76 Hilsendegen, T. 8245 1. 8211 Hinzmann, B. 8141 .G. 7860 Hiort, C. 8046
7909 Hirata, K. 8381 '.M. 8262 Hirschberg, C. B. 7888
7860 Hofmann, K. 8414 8357 Hokin, L. E. 8363
W. F. 8016 Housman, D. 8046 8181 Hu, X. 8046 8280 Huang, J. 8046
). 7939 Huang, L. E. 7987 8357 Huang, Q.-H. 8175 8211 Huby, R. D. J. 8193 7866 Huff, E. J. 8046
8087 Hunt, P. 8153 E. 8124 Ishii, K. 8227 7957 Ishii, T. 8227
A.-K. 8147 Ishikawa, T. 8414 7898 Israel, A. 8108
P. 8153 Ito, C. Y. 8239 5 Ito, K. 8165
ix
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
AUTHOR I
Ito, M. 7939 Lin, J. Ivemeyer, M. 8052 Linke, V Iwabuchi, C. 8199 Lipsky, ] Iwabuchi, K. 8199 Liu, H.-' Jackson, S. A. 8135 Liu, S. ) Jacobson, M. R. 7981 Lodge, I Jallepalli, P. V. 8159 Logeat, Jarriault, S. 8108 Longwo Jenkins, N. A. 7898, 8147, 8205 Lorito, I Jentsch, T. J. 8075 Lowey, Jiang, J. 8135 Lu, B. Jin, J. 8070 Lu, T. Jin, L. 8093 Luchow, Jing, J. 8046 Lupher, Jones, P. A. 8257 Mackma Jonides, J. 8410 Madani, Kabat, D. 8005 Madja, 1 Kachurin, A. M. 8026 Majumd Kahana, C. 8058 Mandel- Kajander, E. 0. 8274 Mandl, ' Kamijo, T. 8292 Mao, M Kan, L.-X. 8175 Margalil Kantor, R. 8046 Marshue Kaplan, E. 8334 Maruyai Kappes, D. J. 8187 Matthev Katada, Y. 8222 Meadow Katoh, R. 8251 Melck, I Kaushansky, K. 8093 Menegh Kavanaugh, M. P. 8005 Milbranm Kawaoi, A. 8251 Miller, J Kawate, H. 8414 Miller, S Keefe, R. 8187 Milligan Kelly, T. J. 8159 Mima, 1 Kennedy, G. 8034 Mishma: Kerem, B. 8141 Mishra, Kerppola, T. K. 7915 Miyake, Kim, H. 8026 Miyama Kimura, S. 8251 Mochly- Kioussis, D. 8193 Moebiu Kirkham, L. A. 7969 Mohand Kishimoto, T. 8222 Moore, Kisiel, W. 8298 Mori, A Knight, B. W. 8334 Morsy, I Kochanek, S. 7866 Moss, F Koeppe, R. A. 8410 Motzel, Kohn, L. D. 8251 Muccifo Kohwi, Y. 8141 Munaka Koizumi, K. 8316 Mundel, Kolmerer, B. 8052 Munro, Kopf, M. 8222 Murai, ( Koufopanou, V. 8414 Murakai Kovall, R. A. 7893 Murdoc] Kozak, S. L. 8005 Nakagav Kunapuli, S. P. 8070 Nakamu Kvatyuk, M. 8233 Nakatsu Kwon, Y. T. 7898 Nathans Laezza, C. 8375 Nathwar Lai, M. M. 8351 Naton, I Lal, A. A. 8124 Nejinska Lang, B. 8328 Newsom Lauzon, A.-M. 8034 Nirenbe Lavaroni, S. 8251 Nishihor Lawrence, C. B. 7860 Nishiok; Leach, D. R. F. 7969 Nix, M. LeBail, 0. 8108 Nobuku Le Cam, A. 8387 Noda, T Lee, J. N. 8181 Nomura Lee, J. R. 8141 North, ! Lee, S. L. 8298 Norton, Lehman, C. W. 8414 Nyakatu Leonard, D. A. 7915 Odenwa Leustek, T. 8404 Ogasaw< Leveillard, T. 8357 Ohki, M Levy, M. 7933 Ohshim; Ley, S. C. 8193 Ohta, M Lin, C. 8286 Olejnicz Lin, D. 8286 Onoe, K
VDEX, JULY 7, 1998
7866 Ostrowski, M. C. 7882 V. A. 8052 Oxley, D. 7921 3. P. 7909 Paik, Y.-K. 8181 . 8147 Palakurthi, S. S. 8280 . 8103 Palmisano, A. 8375 ). 8328 Papayannopoulou, T. 8093 F. 8108 Parchi, P. 8322 ?th, J. W. 7854 Parks, R. J. 7866 /. 7860 Pederson, T. 7981
.8034 Pereira, D. S. 8239 8233 Pestka, S. 8233 8233 Peyrollier, K. 8387 A. 8075 Pich, D. 8245 M. L., Jr. 7927 Pietrarelli, M. 8251 n, N. 8298 Pinsky, D. 8298 N. 8005 Pinto, A. 8328 t. J. 7850 Pintor-Toro, J. A. 7860 ar, A. 8016 Platzer, M. 8141 Gutfroind, Y. 8141 Porter, B. 8046
.8216 Potuschak, T. 7904 8175 Prashanth, A. K. 8334
, H. 8141 Pressler, M. A. 8020 tz, C. 8410 Proshlyakov, D. A. 8020 na, T. 8153 Purugganan, M. D. 8130 s, B. W. 7893 Quinn, M. T. 7993 s, R. P. 7909 Qureshi, I. A. 8351 ). 8375 Rahat, A. 8141 ni, R. 7872 Rajaram, N. 7915 It, J. 8298 Rao, A. P. 8257 . T. 8135 Rao, V. N. 8239 . L. 7933 Raudsepp, T. 8147 R. A. 8040 Reddy, E. S. P. 8239
. 8222 Reece, R. J. 8414 , D. 8141 Reed, J. 8046 B. 8046 Reeves, R. H. 8153 S. 7927 Reich, D. E. 8119 , M. 8262 Reinstein, E. 8058
Rosen, D. 8262 Reiss, Y. 7898 , F. F. 8181 Reuter-Lorenz, P. A. 8410 -Said, S. 8357 Reyes, P. F. 8322 A. N. 8339 Rhodes, C. K. 7854
8251 Richard, R. E. 8093 d. A. 7866 Richardson, C. C. 7957
8328 Roberts, R. M. 7882 S. 7866 Robinson, J. 8414 ra, S. 7860 Rock, K. L. 8216 :a, Y. 8227 Rodriguez, M. M. 8262 P. 8052 Roeder, R. G. 7939 S. 7945 Rollins, M. B. 8392 7. 8227 Ronald, P. C. 8135 ni, Y. 8153 Rosenthal, A. 8141 i, B. 8239 Rothman, P. B. 8233 va, K-i. 8199 Roussel, M. F. 8292 ra, Y. 8165 Rowe-Magnus, D. A. 8414 :u, Y. 8414 Sabatini, D. M. 8351 on, M. H. 8381 Sacki, Y. 8222 li, B. 8257 Safer, M. L. 8369 3. 8398 Sahel, J.-A. 8357 ia, V. 7904 Saito, J. 8251 -Davis, J. 8328 Saitoh, T. 8227 rg, M. 8316 Sakumi, K. 8414 i, H. 8199 Sangan, P. 7898 , K. 8222 Sas, D. E. 8141 8414 Sasai, M. 8222
ii, T. 8153 Sasaki, T. 8227 8414 Saunders, H.-M. H. 8316
S. 8222 Savage, J. M. 8280 . 8064 Sawai, T. 8227 T. 8193 Scala, F. 7860 ra, G. 8141 Schau, M. 7987 d, W. 8316 Scheraga, H. A. 8011 ra, K. 8199 Scherer, S. W. 8141 . 8153 Schlogelhofer, P. 7904 5, S. 8222 Schmelzer, E. 8398 . 8251 Schmitt, E. A. 8414 Ik, E. T. 7909 Schnuchel, A. 7909 . 8199 Schumacher, R. I. 7872
x
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
AUTHOR IN
Schwartz, A. L. 8058 Takahashi Schwartz, D. C. 8046 Takano, t Sears, M. L. 8381 Takayanal Seidah, N. G. 8108 Tamura, I Sekiguchi, M. 8414 Tanaka, I Sekiya, T. 8153 Tanigami, Senut, M.-C. 7999 Taylor, J. Shefter, M. 7850 Teixeira, I Shen, Y. 8175 Terlecky, Shenker, A. 8046 Tian, L.-I\ Sherr, C. J. 8292 Tien, D. Shibata, S. 8227 Tobias, K. Sigal, L. J. 8216 Tomiuk, S Simonutti, M. 8357 Tone, S. Singer, D. S. 8251 Trosset, J. Siritanaratkul, N. 8093 Trybus, K Sirovich, L. 8334 Tsai, J. Smith, E. E. 8410 Tsai, L. Smyth, L. A. 8193 Tsai, Y. C Snyder, S. H. 8351 Tselepis, ( Soto, H. 8205 Tsui, L.-C Spiegelman, G. B. 8414 Tsuzuki, 1 Spruck, C. H., III 8257 Tuzun, S. Squire, T. L. 8392 Uno, M. Stary, S. 7904 Utermann Stauderman, K. 8328 Vandewal Staunton, D. E. 7909 Varshavsk Stern, D. 8298 Vinograd( Stockmeier, M. R. 8052 Virsolvy, Stoffel, W. 8414 Waldren, Strieter, R. M. 8205 Wang, G. Su, Q. 7866 Wang, H. Subramani, S. 8087 Wang, J. I Suddith, J. I. 8130 Wang, W. Suemura, M. 8222 Wang, Y. Sugamura, K. 8227 Wang, Y. Suhr, S. T. 7999 Warshaw, Suzuki, K. 8251 Weber, J. Szweda, L. I. 7975 Weiss, A. Szweda, P. A. 7975 Whyte, K, Takahashi, S. 8414 Wiggins, (
DEX, JULY 7, 1998
,Y. 8227 Williams, M. 8328 [. 8414 Williams, 0. 8193 ri, T. 8199 Wilson-Kubalek, E. M. 8040
.8153 Wink, D. 8268 8222 Witsch-Baumgartner, M. 8181
A. 8153 Wogan, G. N. 8286 W. 8414 Wolfson, E. 8046 . D. 7872 Woo, S. L. 7860 . R. 8087 Woodage, T. 8147
[. 8339 Wu, J. 8034 8159 Wu, J.-S. 8175 E. 8058 Xia, D. 8026
8414 Xia, J.-Z. 8026 8199 Xu, S.-H. 8175 -Y. 8011 Yan, S.-F. 8298
8034 Yoon, J. K. 7898 .304 Youl, J. J. 7921 7975 Yu, C.-A. 8026
1. ~8257 ~Yu, L. 7993, 8026 82^ 80647 ~Yu, Y.-P. 8175 -8064
Yuan, C.-X. 7939 8141 ;.- 81~414 Zambetti, G. 8292
8414 Zatorska, D. 8369 ^^~~7860 ~Zatorski, A. 8369
8165 Zeidler, R. 8245 .,G. 8181 Zeng, L. 8016 e, A. 8075 lc~,
A. 8075 Zhai, C. 8298
y, A. 7898 Zhang, L. 8026 va, 0. 7975 Zhang, Q.-H. 8175 1. 8387 Zhao, J. 7866
C. 8103 Zheng, T. 8257 L. 8135 Zheng, Y.-H. 8369
7909 Zhou, J. 8175 . 7876 Zhuang, J. C. 8286 8205 Zindy, F. 8292 8233 Zlotnik, A. 8205
X. 8175 Zoina, A. 7860 D. M. 8034 Zou, J.-P. 8239 D. 8292 Zou, W. 8322
8141 Zou, Y. S. 8298 8328 Zuiderweg, E. R. P. 8016 A. A.R. 7945 Zumbansen, M. 8414
xi
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 95, July 1998
INFORMATIO?
(Revised
PURPOSE AND SCOPE
The PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
USA publishes research reports, commentaries, and colloquium papers. In accordance with the guiding principles established by George Ellery Hale in 1914, the PROCEEDINGS publishes brief first announcements of Academy Members' and Foreign Asso- ciates' (hereafter referred to as Members) more important con- tributions to research and of work that appears to a Member to be of particular importance. PROCEEDINGS is a general science
journal with a broad scientific audience. All papers should be intelligible to this audience.
RESEARCH REPORTS describe the results of original research of exceptional importance. The papers should be of the highest scientific quality.
COMMENTARIES call attention to papers of particular note and are written at the invitation of the Editorial Board.
COLLOQUIUM PAPERS are reports of scientific colloquia held under Academy auspices.
EDITORIAL POLICIES
Submission and Review
Manuscripts may be submitted to the PROCEEDINGS through any of the following three tracks:
Track I. An Academy Member may "communicate" manu- scripts for others that are within the Member's area of expertise. Prior to submission to the PROCEEDINGS, the Member obtains reviews of the paper from at least two qualified referees, each from a different institution and not from the authors' institutions.
Track II. Authors (Members or non-Members) may submit their manuscripts directly to the PROCEEDINGS office. In a cover
letter, authors must name five Members who are expert in the paper's scientific area, although the Editorial Board may choose a Member as editor for the paper who may not be on that list. The Member-editor conducts the review of the paper as described for Track I. A list of Members appears in Vol. 95, issue 1 (Jan. 6,1998). A list including research interests is on the PNAS Home Page (see NAS Members): http://www.pnas.org. Authors may also suggest qualified referees. The name of the Member-editor, who may remain anonymous to the author until the paper is accepted, will be published in the PROCEEDINGS as editor of the article.
Track III. An Academy Member may submit his or her own manuscripts for publication. Members' submissions must be accompanied by the assurance that the manuscript has been reviewed by a knowledgeable colleague who is not a coauthor.
All Tracks. Manuscripts submitted under any of the three tracks are evaluated by the Editorial Board. The Board may reject manuscripts without further review or may subject manuscripts to review and reject those that do not meet the standards of the journal. Manuscripts rejected by one Member cannot be resub- mitted through another Member. When revisions are requested prior to final decision, revised papers must be received within three months or they will be treated as new submissions.
In the journal, Track I, II, and III papers are distinguished respectively as "Communicated by," "Edited by," and "Con- tributed by" the responsible Member. Track II papers have an additional identifying footnote.
Journal Policies
(i) Articles are accepted provided they have not been PUB- LISHED PREVIOUSLY or concurrently submitted for publication elsewhere. Three copies of any closely related manuscripts in press
V FOR AUTHORS
July 1998)
or submitted for publication elsewhere by the authors must be included.
Figures or tables that have been published elsewhere must be identified, and permission of the copyright holder for both the print and the online editions of the journal must be provided.
(ii) AUTHORSHIP should be limited to those who have contrib- uted substantially to the work. The corresponding author must have obtained permission from all authors for the submission of each version of the paper and for any change in authorship.
(iii) All authors must disclose any commercial association that might pose a CONFLICT OF INTEREST in connection with the manuscript. All funding sources supporting the work must be acknowledged.
(iv) A completed form assigning COPYRIGHT to the National
Academy of Sciences must be returned to the PROCEEDINGS office before the paper can be published. This and other forms are available on request and at http://www.pnas.org.
(v) The Academy may distribute EMBARGOED copies of an article to the press prior to publication.
(vi) Research involving LIVE HUMAN AND ANIMAL SUB- JECTS must have been approved by the author's institutional review board. All clinical investigation must have been con- ducted according to the principles expressed in the Declaration of Helsinki.
(vii) For research using RECOMBINANT DNA, physical and
biological containment must conform to National Institutes of Health guidelines or those of a corresponding agency.
(viii) Authors must make UNIQUE MATERIALS (e.g., cloned DNAs; antibodies; bacterial, animal, or plant cells; viruses; and computer programs) available on request to qualified re- searchers for noncommercial use.
(ix) DATABASES: Accession codes must be supplied for
publication. A footnote indicating that the data have been deposited will be added to the paper.
Protein and Nucleic Acid Sequences: Authors should submit manuscripts containing nucleotide sequences to GenBank/ EMBL/DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ) at GenBank, National Center for Biotechnology Information, 8600 Rockville Pike, Building 38A, Room 8N-803, Bethesda, MD 20894 USA. Phone: (301) 496-2475. E-mail (submissions): [email protected]. E-mail (information): [email protected]. An accession num- ber must be obtained before the manuscript is printed.
Structures of Oligonucleotides: Authors must deposit these data directly with the Nucleic Acid Database at [email protected].
Structural Studies: Authors of papers describing new struc- ture determinations must submit to the Protein Data Bank at Brookhaven National Laboratory all structural data required to validate the discussion, including x-ray amplitudes and the derived atomic coordinates. For nuclear magnetic resonance structures, data deposited should include resonance assign- ments and all restraints used in structure determination and the derived atomic coordinates for both an individual structure and a family of acceptable structures.
PROCEDURES FOR SUBMITTING MANUSCRIPTS
Corresponding Author. The name, address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of the author responsible for reviewing the page proofs should be provided on the title page of the manuscript. Manuscripts should be sent to PROCEED- INGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 2101 Consti- tution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20418 USA, or by courier or express mail to 1055 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W.,
xii
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Information for Authors
Suite 2013, Washington, DC 20007 USA. Phone: (202) 334- 2672. Fax: (202) 334-2739 or 2740. E-mail: [email protected].
Publication Charges. Page charges: The PROCEEDINGS de- pends, in part, on the payment of page charges for its opera- tion. Payment of the page charge of $60 per printed page is expected for all authors who have funds available for that purpose. Requests for waiver of page charges should be submitted to the Editor-in-Chief. Articles are accepted or rejected only on the basis of merit.
Color illustration charges: Author(s) must pay the additional cost of color illustrations. The cost is $600 for the first color figure and $300 for each additional color figure. A single figure is defined as original art that can be processed as a unit and printed on one page without intervening type. A quotation will be sent to the corresponding author, and written approval must be received before the color illustrations are processed. Each sub- sequent replacement or deletion of a color figure will cost $300.
Manuscript Preparation
Disks. To expedite publication, all manuscripts must be accompanied by a computer disk. The version on the disk must match the hard copy. Guidelines for papers submitted in TeX or LaTeX may be obtained.
Manuscript Length. The PROCEEDINGS uses a two-column format averaging 60 characters, including spaces, per line. The maximum length of a research article is six printed pages or 47,000 characters, including spaces, all text, and the number of characters displaced by figures, tables, and equations. The total number of characters equals:
The number of characters including spaces in the text (include all parts except tables), plus
The depth in cm of each figure at desired printed size X 180 for a one-column figure or X 360 for a two-column figure, plus
The depth in number of lines of each table x 60 for a one-column table or X 120 for a two-column table, plus
A 120-character allowance for the space above and below each single column of a figure, table, or equation, plus
An additional 60 characters for each one-column line of equation.
A table that has lines with more than 60 characters plus spaces or a figure that is wider than 8.5 cm takes up two columns in width.
If the word processing program character count excludes spaces, add the word count to the character count to obtain a character count that includes spaces.
Authors will be responsible for additional charges incurred due to shortening overlong papers in proof.
EXAMPLE (PROVIDE BREAKDOWN WITH MANUSCRIPT):
Character Material count
All text characters (including title page, abstract, legends, references) plus spaces 25,660
Fig. 1 (1-column, 16 cm high = 180 x 16) 2,880 Fig. 2 (1-column, 12 cm high = 180 x 12) 2,160 Fig. 3 (1-column, 21 cm high = 180 x 21) 3,780 Fig. 4 (1-column, 11 cm high = 180 X 11) 1,980 Fig. 5 (2-column, 17 cm high = 360 x 17) 6,120 Table 1 (2-column, 23 lines deep = 120 x 23) 2,760 Equations [one 2-line and one 1-line eq., 1-col. = (3 x 60)] 180 Space Allowance
4 single-column figures (4 X 120) 480 1 double-column figure (1 x 240) 240 1 double-column table (1 x 240) 240 2 single-column equations (2 X 120) 240
Total characters in paper (must not exceed 47,000) 46,720
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95 (1998) xiii
Checklist for Submission:
Submit the following with the cover letter: * Five complete copies (six for Track II submissions) of the
manuscript in final form, printed double-spaced, pages num- bered, with one set of figures for the printer, four sets of high- quality figures, and one photocopied set of figures. All illustrations should be submitted at final size. If this is not feasible, indicate the desired reduction and, if possible, include one photocopy of figures at final size. Requests to return figures cannot be guaranteed.
* One computer disk of the final version of the manuscript. Identify the platform, program, first author, date, and file name on the disk label.
* The character count breakdown of the manuscript. Submit the completed Worksheet for Sizing Papers.
* The completed Copyright Assignment Form. * The classification of the paper (see below). * References according to PROCEEDINGS style.
MANUSCRIPT FORMAT
Title Page. Include the following information on this page: Classification: Select a major (Physical, Biological, or Social
Sciences) and a minor category from the following. Dual classifications are permitted between major categories and in exceptional cases within a major category. Authors may submit a request to the Editorial Board for a listing in the table of contents under two minor categories.
Physical Sciences: Applied Mathematics, Applied Physical Sciences, Astronomy, Chemistry, Computer Sciences, Engineer- ing, Geology, Geophysics, Mathematics, Physics, and Statistics.
Biological Sciences: Agricultural Sciences, Applied Biological Sciences, Biochemistry, Biophysics, Cell Biology, Developmental Biology, Ecology, Evolution, Genetics, Immunology, Medical Sciences, Microbiology, Neurobiology, Pharmacology, Physiol- ogy, Plant Biology, Population Biology, and Psychology.
Social Sciences: Anthropology, Economic Sciences, Psychol- ogy, Political Sciences, and Social Sciences.
Title: Should not include nonstandard abbreviations and must be brief.
Author affiliation: Include department, institution, and complete address for each author. If there are authors with different affiliations, use superscripts to match authors with institutions.
Corresponding author: The name, complete address, tele- phone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of the author to whom correspondence and proofs should be sent. Mailing and e-mail addresses will appear in print and online.
Manuscript information: The number of text pages (including references and figure legends), of figures, and of tables.
Word and character counts: The number of words in the abstract and the total number of characters in the paper.
Abbreviations footnote: List nonstandard abbreviations used five or more times. Define these where first mentioned in the text and do not use them in the title.
Data deposition footnote: Supply all database accession numbers and/or codes.
Abstract. Provide an abstract of no more than 250 words on page 2 of the manuscript. Abstracts should explain to the general reader the major contributions of the article. Refer- ences in the abstract must be cited in full.
Text. Describe procedures in sufficient detail so that the work can be repeated. Follow the spelling and usage given in Webster's Third New International Dictionary or the Random House Dictio- nary of the English Language. Avoid laboratory jargon. Correct chemical names should be given and strains of organisms should be specified. Trade names should be identified by an initial capital letter with the remainder of the name lowercase. Names and addresses of suppliers of uncommon reagents or instruments
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
xiv Information for Authors
should be provided. Use Systeme International (SI) units and symbols whenever possible. When SI units are not used, the factor for conversion should be provided on first usage.
Footnotes. Use symbols in the order *, ?, t, ?, ?, Ii, t* , 4, ??, ??.
Acknowledgments. List dedications, acknowledgments, and funding sources.
References. References must be in PROCEEDINGS style. Only published or in-press papers and books may be cited in the reference list. Abstracts of papers presented at meetings are not permitted. References should be cited in numerical order as they appear in text. Because tables and figures will be inserted in the text where first cited, references in these sections should be numbered accordingly. All authors (unless there are 10 or more) should be named in the citation. Databases are cited in the text or as footnotes.
The corresponding author must be prepared to provide a signed authorization for the citation of unpublished data and personal communications.
Journal articles are cited as follows: 10. Neuhaus, J.-M., Sitcher, L., Meins, F., Jr., & Boiler, T. (1991)
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88, 10362-10366. For correct abbreviations of journal titles, refer to Chemical
Abstracts Service Source Index (CASSI). Articles or chapters in books are cited as follows:
14. Hill, A. V. S. (1991) in Molecular Evolution of the Major Histo- compatibility Complex, eds. Klein, J. & Klein, D. (Springer, Heidelberg), pp. 403-420.
Figure Legends should be provided separately from the figures. Illustrations. Original drawings, laser prints, or high-quality
photographs are required and should be submitted at the desired printed size. If this is not feasible, indicate the reduc- tion and, if possible, include one photocopy of figures at final
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95 (1998)
size. Label the back of each figure with the first author's name, the figure number, the orientation (top), and the desired final size.
Electronic Illustrations must be on a separate disk from the text and accompanied by a camera-ready original or high- quality laser proof, and the file name, type, and size. A one-column figure cannot be more than 8.4 cm wide and a two-column figure must be between 8.4 and 17.7 cm wide.
Images must be at the final size desired. Indicate the input resolution on any scanned images, the format of any com-
pressed files, and the file format-TIFF and EPS formats for Macintosh and PC are the only acceptable formats. All four-color images must be in CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) mode. Include the font files for any text. PC or Macintosh versions of Adobe PostScript fonts must be used (no system "bitmap" fonts). The following media types can be used: 3.5" diskettes; 44, 88, 200 MB Syquest cartridge (5.25" disk); 128 MB Optical (3.5" disk); 600 MB Magneto-Optical (5.25" disk); 150 MB Iomega-Bernoulli disk; Zip and/or Jaz disk; CD-ROM. For more information, see http://cjs.cadmus. com/da.
Color Illustrations. Submit one set of prints for the printer (unmounted or mounted on flexible backing) at the desired
printed size, or slides with a print or a color photocopy indicating magnification and cropping needed to achieve the desired printed size, and four sets of high-quality figures.
Tables are numbered (Arabic numerals) in the order in which they are cited in the text. Each table should have a brief title, be on a separate page, and be printed double-spaced.
Nomenclature and Style. International standards on nomen- clature should be used. For recommended style guides, no- menclature, abbreviations, and symbols, see http://www.pnas. org or contact the PROCEEDINGS office.
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Proceedings of the Nati
Worksheet for Sizi
Author names:
Research articles may be no more than 47,000 cha
printed pages. This count includes all text and the
equations. The total number of characters equals:
The number of characters including spaces in th4
The depth in cm of each figure at desired printe
The depth in number of lines of each table incli
(A table that has lines with more than 60 cha:
cm takes up two columns in width.) A 120-character allowance for space above and
equation, plus An additional 60 characters for each one-column I
Please use the table below to calculate your charn
ple calculation, see the Information for Authors
Does your word processing program count sp All text characters (including title page,
abstract, legends, references) plus spaces..
Fig. 1 ......................................
Fig. 2 ......................................
Fig. 3 ......................................
Fig. 4 ......................................
Fig. 5 ......................................
Table 1 ....................................
Table 2 ....................................
Table 3 ....................................
Table 4 ....................................
Equation(s) ................................
Space allowance
120 characters for each one-column figur 240 characters for each two-column figurl
Total Characters in P
*If you are unable to submit figures at final size, please provide a ph tWord processing programs differ in how they count characters: not all count excludes spaces, add the word count to the character count to ol Freehand 6.0, the character count includes spaces. FOR PCs: For We and 7 (for Windows 95) and WordPerfect 6, add the word count to WordPerfect 5.2 and other programs (MAC or PC) that give only the vX per word including spaces) to obtain the total character count. If you TO PNAS. If the character count is 21 (or 20), your program includl characters your program excludes spaces, and you must add the num
tAuthors may be responsible for additional charges incurred due to s
onal Academy of Sciences
ng Research Articles
Ms. No. (if known):
racters, including spaces, and thus may not exceed six
number of characters displaced by figures, tables, and
: text (include all parts except tables), plus
d size* x 180 for a one-column figure or
x 360 for a two-column figure, plus
ding spaces X 60 for a one-column table or
x 120 for a two-column table, plus racters plus spaces or a figure that is wider than 8.5
below each single column of a figure, table, or
ine of equation.
icter count and submit with your paper. (For a sam-
in a recent PNAS issue or at http://www.pnas.org.)
aces?t Yes No (please add spaces)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .___ _ c h a r a c te r s
* . * * * * . * * * . . * * . . ........ * . . o
table, or equation......... .... ..
, table, or equation.... ..... _____ aper (must not exceed 47,000)..
)tocopy of figures at final size and indicate desired reduction.
include spaces. Your character count must include spaces. If your character
o * * . * **.***......... ........ ....
tain a character count that includes spaces. FOR MACs For Wrd 5.1 and
* * * * *..* * **.......*o ..* *..-......
~, table, or equation .........
:, table, or equation .........
aper (must not exceed 47,000)
rd 97, select the character count that includes spaces. For Word versions 6 the character count to obtain a character count that includes spaces. For ord count, multiply the word count by 6.5 (the average number of characters r program is not listed above, type a test phrase such as SUBMIT PAPER 's spaces and this is the number you should report; however, if you get 17 ber of words to the number of characters. lortening papers in proof.
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NAT:
OF THE UNITED
. -
ANNUAL PRINT AND OP (Calend
USA (Periodicals Class Mail) Online Ot
Institutional l $615 Individual* i $100 Postdoctoral* F] $ 50 Student* ]I $ 50
ELSEWHERE (Surface Mail) Online Or
Institutional i $615 Individual* O $100 Postdoctoral* F $ 50 Student* D $ 50
Expedited Delivery Rates for print are available on request. *Individual, Student, and Postdoctoral subscriptions are for
for these rates, you must pay by personal check, money order, use only. To qualify for the Student or Postdoctoral rates, yo or supervisor, on institutional letterhead, stating that you ar are within four years of receiving a doctorate.
Tax information: Canadian subscribers must add 7% GST I must add appropriate sales tax: in DC add 5.75% sales tax, i: county. If the subscription is paid at the institutional rate and 1 must accompany the order. All subscriptions paid at the ind
Subscribers in Japan: Please send all orders to our excl Minato-ku, Tokyo 105 Japan.
Make remittance payable to the Proceedings of the National U.S. bank in U.S. dollars, International Money Order, or cr
Credit Card Order: LC MasterCard F1 VISA I A
Account Number
Name of Account Holder (please print or type)
Authorized Signature
Shipping Information: (please type)
Name
Address
Send Credit Card Orders and Correspondence to: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20418 USA
If you have any questions, you may contact us at 202/334-2676
[ONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
;TATES OF AMERICA
. : :::: : :::
7j:i;; ?ll -"':
[LINE SUBSCRIPTION RATES ar Year 1998)
:ly Print Only Print Plus Online
F $685 o $820 L $165 Fi $195 L $125 i $150 -
$ 90 a $110
fly Print Only Print Plus Online
o $785 i $920 i $265 i $295 i $225 o $250 I $190 i $210
personal use only and are not to be used in a library. To qualify or credit card, and must state that your subscription is for personal ur order must also be accompanied by a letter from your advisor e enrolled in a program of study leading to a degree or that you
Registration Number R-133130880). DC and Florida subscribers i Florida add 6% sales tax and local surtax, if you are in a taxing he institution is tax exempt, a copy of the tax exemption certificate ividual rate are taxable. isive agent, USACO Corporation, 13-12, Shimbashi, 1-Chome,
Academy of Sciences. Foreign remittance must be by draft on a edit card.
merican Express Amount $
Expiration Date
Telephone or Fax #
Send Orders with Check or Money Order to: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences P.O. Box 631008 Baltimore, MD 21263-1008 USA
(Phone), 202/334-2738 (Fax), or [email protected] (E-mail).
PNAS98
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONA
Copyright
(Please complete this form an(
In order that PNAS may disseminate the WORK assigns, conveys, and transfers exclusively to the Nationa identified herein (including abstracts or summaries submiti throughout the world in all forms, languages, and media consideration of the publication of the WORK in the PN
The author(s) warrants that the WORK is original, not been assigned, licensed, or otherwise transferred to an attached for any portions of the WORK subject to another this form. If any author's signature does not appear below signs this assignment as authorized agent(s) for and on beh; of all the authors. The authors shall indemnify the Academ and expenses, including attorney's fees, arising out of an' herein. This assignment is subject to the following condit:
The author(s) reserves all proprietary rights, other
The author(s) reserves the right, after publicatior compilations or other publications of the author's own wo author's use for lectures, classroom instruction, or similar
If the WORK has been prepared by an employee wil the right to make copies of the WORK for its own intern
Title of WORK
Author's Signature Date
Print Name
If WORK is a Work Made for Hire and the employer of th by an authorized representative of the employer.
Name of Employer/Name(s) of Employee(s)
Authorized Signature
Name of Employer/Name(s) of Employee(s)
Authorized Signature
(For U.S. Government Employees Only)
I certify that the WORK was written as part of my offici;
Author's Signature Date
Print Name
Failure to complete and return this form after acceptance ( of the WORK.
?L ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, USA (PNAS)
Assignment
I submit it with your manuscript)
to the fullest extent, the author(s) hereby irrevocably grants, 1 Academy of Sciences (USA) the copyright in the WORK ed with the WORK), under all laws, treaties, and conventions now or hereafter known or developed without limitation in AS.
that it has not been published, that the copyright interest has other party, and that permissions have been obtained and are copyright. Each author identified on the manuscript must sign , the signing author(s) represents and warrants that he or she ilf of all the authors and that this assignment is made on behalf y and/or its successors and assigns for any and all claims, costs r breach of this warranty or other representations contained ons:
than copyright, such as patent rights.
of the work in PNAS, to use all or part of the WORK in rks, and to make copies of all or a part of the WORK for the uses.
hin the scope of his or her employment, the employer reserves al use.
Author's signature Date
Print Name
v author(s) owns the copyright, this assignment must be signed
Date Title
Date Title
il duties as an employee of the U.S. government.
Author's signature Date
Print Name
f your WORK for publication will delay or prevent publication
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Proceedings of the Nati
Author names:
Documei
Please check, sign, and inclu
If any of the following items are pertiner documentation or statements from you before
Please check the appropriate boxes and sigi
LO Structural Coordinate Deposition i revised structures must deposit the
equivalent public archive, and the ac, You agree, by signing below, that th published. A footnote reporting the a(
must provide the accession numbers o:
O Sequence Database Deposition. Autt these data to an appropriate database
publication. A footnote reporting the a must provide the accession numbers o'
Cl Permission to Print Previously Pul such as figures or tables that have be( author of the earlier publication, we
republish this material in print and the original publisher. Please let us I
where they appeared:
El None of the 3 items above applies to
Name (please print)
Signature
onal Academy of Sciences
Ms. No. (if known):
itation Report
de thisform with your manuscript.
t to your paper, we must have the appropriate we can publish your paper.
i below:
Ind Release. Authors of papers reporting new or ir coordinates in the Protein Data Bank or an
:ession numbers must be supplied for publication. e coordinates will be released when the article is ,cession numbers will be added to your paper. You I the page proof.
.ors of papers reporting new sequences must submit
, and the accession numbers must be supplied for ccession numbers will be added to your paper. You i the page proof.
)lished Material. If your paper includes material mn published previously, whether or not you are an must have the previous publisher's permission to online. We acknowledge that copyright is held by know which items were published previously and
this paper.
Date
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Call for Nominati
The NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES presents a nun
have made a major impact on the scientific community. N 1999 will be accepted through September 1, 1998. For mc
web site at <www.nas.edu/nas> or call (202) 334-1686.
biology and medicine Richard Lounsbery Award
biomedical science (young investigator) NAS Award for Initiatives in Research
chemistry NAS Award in Chemical Sciences NAS Award for Chemistry in Service to Society economics NAS Award for Scientific Reviewing environmental science Robertson Memorial Lecture
geology and paleontology Mary Clark Thompson Medal
marine engineering/naval architecture Gibbs Brothers Medal
NATIONAL ACAE Awards Program - 2101 Constitution Aver
(202) 334-1686 - (202) 334-2153 FAX - r
Postdoctoral Positions: INSTITUTE FOR CEL STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW '
The Institute for Cell and Developmental Biology provide biologists in the numerous academic departments at Ston5 Members of the Institute with postdoctoral positions avai D. BarSagi - Signal Transduction and Growth Control D. Bogenhagen - Mitochondrial DNA Replication, Transc D. Brown - Structure and Function of Cholesterol and Spi V. Citovsky - Nuclear Import and Intercellular Communic; M. Frohman - Control of Neural Differentiation; Role of P J.P. Gergen - Transcriptional Regulation in Drosophila; St M. Hayman - Signal Transduction Pathways in Cell Grow B. Holdener - Genetic Analysis of Embryonic Patterning, ( M. Kernan - Genetics and Molecular Biology of the Mech J. Konopka - G-protein-Coupled Receptor Signaling in Y( W. Lennarz - Glycoproteins: Biosynthesis in Yeast and F C. Malbon - G-proteins in Signaling and Development W. Todd Miller - Tyrosine Kinases and Signal Transducti A. Morris - Phospholipid Signaling J. Prives - Biogenesis and Cell Membrane Distribution of J. Quigley - Tumor Cell Angiogenesis, Invasion, and Metz N. Reich - Signal Transduction and Regulation of Gene E S. Smith - Structure and Function of Membrane Proteins I R. Sternglanz - Yeast Genes Affecting Chromatin Structure S. Strickland - Early Development in Mouse and Drosophi G. Thomsen - Growth Factors, Signal Transduction and Me J. Trimmer - Structure, Function and Expression of Mamma Please indicate the faculty member(s) whose work is of inl
Dr. W. J. Lennarz, Department of i SUNY at Stony Brook, Stony
The State University of New York at Stony Brook is an A
mns- 1999 Awards
iber of awards to recognize individuals whose contributions ominations for the following awards to be presented in re information or to obtain a nomination form, visit our
microbiology Selman A. Waksman Award in Microbiology molecular biology (young investigator) NAS Award in Molecular Biology
physics Comstock Prize in Physics
physics of the Earth Arthur L. Day Prize and Lectureship
experimental psychology (young investigators) Troland Research Awards
solar physics and solar-terrestrial relationships Arctowski Medal
science (general) NAS Award for the Industrial Application of Science NAS Public Welfare Medal
CED CaC-
>EMY OF SCIENCES ue, N.W., Room 185 - Washington, DC 20418 [email protected] - http://www.nas.edu/nas/
L AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY YORK AT STONY BROOK s for collaborative interactions between cell and developmental Brook and training opportunities for postdoctoral students.
[able:
ription and Repair ingolipid-Rich Membrane Domains ttion in Plants hospholipase D Gene in Signal Transduction ructure and Function of Runt Domain Proteins h, Differentiation and Disease "left Palate, and Thymus Development in Mice tnical Senses: Touch and Hearing in Drosophila :ast unction in Fertilization and Development
Neurotransmitter Receptors stasis Kpression by Cytokines Ising Biophysical Approaches and Function
a; Role of Proteases in the Mammalian Brain :soderm Formation in Vertebrate Embryos lian Brain Ion Channels erest to you and direct your inquiries to: Biochemistry and Cell Biology Brook, NY 11794-5215 7irmative Action/Equal Opportunity Educator and Employer.
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
STATE-OF-THE-ART LECTURES plus sessions on:
AIDS Malignancies, KS, B-cell Lymphoma, & HHV8
* Animal Models
* Biology.f Lmphocytes in Normal & S tDisease tates
C-C-C-C-C- ..-an. C-C-C-C-C-
EBI3V Herpes 617
* Therapy
* Vaccine & Antigen Presentation
? Tutorials
FOR CURRENT PROGRAM INFORMATION OR TO OBTAIN
Visit our Web Site: www.ihv.org
or Phone Robin Serody Institute of Human Virology
410.706.8614
email: [email protected]
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
Appointed Position
Job Title: Research Associate Opening Date: September 1, 1998 Starting Salary: $25,000 (range based on
experience) Department: Plant Sciences
Two postdoctoral research positions are available to study molecular genetic and cell biological aspects of maize endosperm development. The research will focus on the regulation of DNA endoreduplication and the role of the cytoskeleton in mRNA trafficking. Candidates must have a Ph.D. with appropriate experience in genetics, protein biochemistry and ultrastructural analyses. Send letter of application, resume, and three letters of reference by October 1, 1998 to Dr. Brian A. Larkins, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721; telephone (620) 621-9958; FAX (520) 621-3697; e-mail [email protected].
The University of Arizona is an EEO/AA/ADA employer.
Women and minorities are encouraged to apply.
POSTDOCTORAL FELLOW The National Cancer Institute is seeking a postdoctoral fellow to join the laboratory of Drs. Yutaka Tagaya and Thomas Waldmann. This lab focuses on the molecular genetic, biochemical, and functional roles played by cytokines and their receptors in the control of the immune response. Emphasis is placed on the cytokine IL-15 codiscovered by the laboratory. Research interests include: characterization of the multifaceted regulatory control of IL-15 expression with emphasis on the regulation of IL-15 mRNA translation and cytokine secretion; definition of the diverse receptor and signaling pathways used by IL-15 including molecular cloning of IL-15RX, expressed on mast cells; and characterization of unique functions of IL-15 using IL-15 deficient mice produced by gene targeting. We seek candidates who are bright and motivated. Experience in molecular biology and an understanding of immunology and cell biology while preferred, are not essential. This position is available immediately. Interested candidates should send a Curriculum Vitae, bibliography and list of three references to:
Ms. Jean Decker, Bldg. 10, Rm. 4N115 10 Center Dr., MSC 1374 Bethesda, Maryland 20892
NIH is an equal opportunity employer
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
NOT]
OF
TELEPHONE
Please note the following changes for the Editorial and Business Of are effective July 10, 1998.
The new numbers are as follows
Main phone: Editorial fax:
Business fax:
V's
CE
CHANGE
;in the phone and fax numbers fices of the Proceedings, which
202-334-2672
202-334-2739
202-334-2738
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 2101 CONST:
En_b
ITUTION AVENUE, NW WASHINGTON, DC 20418
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 11:34:54 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions