+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Front Matter

Front Matter

Date post: 08-Jan-2017
Category:
Upload: vokiet
View: 213 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
11
Front Matter Source: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 93, No. 12 (Jun. 11, 1996), pp. i-viii Published by: National Academy of Sciences Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/39603 . Accessed: 07/05/2014 16:19 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 of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . National Academy of Sciences is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Transcript
Page 1: Front Matter

Front MatterSource: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,Vol. 93, No. 12 (Jun. 11, 1996), pp. i-viiiPublished by: National Academy of SciencesStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/39603 .

Accessed: 07/05/2014 16:19

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 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Front Matter

PROCEEDINGS OF THE

NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

June 11, 1996

Volume 93 / Number 12

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 3: Front Matter

PROCEEDINGS OF THE

NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Officers BRUCE ALBERTS, President of the JACK HALPERN, Vice President Academy PETER H. RAVEN, Home Secretary

F. SHiERWOOD ROWLAND, Foreign Secretary MILDRED S. DRESSELHAUS, Treasurer

Editor-in-Chief NICHiOLAS R. COZZARELLI

Editorial Board PETER J. BICKEL JACK HALPERN PAUL R. SCHIMMEL of the MICHAEL T. CLEGG ERIC R. KANDEL STUART L. SCHREIBER Proceedings MARSHALL H. COHEN RICHARD A. LERNER CARLA J. SHATZ

STANLEY N. COHEN HARVEY F. LODISH CHRISTOPHER A. SIMS MAX D. COOPER PHIL W. MAJERUS ALLAN C. SPRADLING JAMES E. DARNELL, JR. ARNO G. MOTULSKY LARRY R. SQUIRE IGOR B. DAWID RONALD L. PHILLIPS CHARLES F. STEVENS HERMAN N. EISEN ToM POLLARD JoANNE STUBBE RAYMOND L. ERIKSON STANLEY B. PRUSINER KARL, K. TUREKIAN RONALD M. EVANS CHARLES RADDING IRVING L. WEISSMAN NINA FEDOROFF GIAN-CARLo ROTA SHERMAN M. WEISSMAN CHARLES FEFFERMAN DAVID D. SABATINI PETER G. WOLYNES JOSEPH L. GOLDSTEIN GOTTFRIED SCHATZ

Publisher: KENNETH R. FULTON Managing Editor: FRANCES R. ZWANZIG Associate Editorial Manager: JOHN M. MALLOY Associate Manager for Production: JOANNE D'AMICo Author/Member Support Coordinators: REID S. COMPTON, BARBARA A. BACON System Administrator: MARILYN J. MASON Manuscript Processor: JACQUELINE V. PERRY Secretary: BRENDA L. MCCoY Administrative/Systems Aide: DOTTIE A. MAY Subscription Fulfillmetnt: JULIA A. LITTLE Office Assistant: CYNTHIA MATHEWS

Co-responidence: PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20418 (via U.S. postal service) or 1010 Wisconsin Avenue, NW, Suite 530, Washington, DC 20007 (via courier service).

Information for Contributors: See pp. i and ii (of this issue).

Copyright: Volumes 90-93, copyright ( 1993-1996 by the National Academy of Sciences; Volumes 1-89, copyright as a collective work only with copyright to individual articles retained by the author(s). Requests for permission to reproduce all or parts of individual articles published in Volumes 1-89 should be addressed to the authors. Microforms of complete volumes are available to regular subscribers only and may be obtained from University Microfilms, Xerox Corporation, Ann Arbor, MI 48103. This journal is printed on acid-free paper effective with Volume 84, Issue 1.

Subscriptions: All correspondence concerning subscriptions should be addressed to the Circulation Office of the PROCEEDINGS. Subscriptions are entered on a calendar year basis only. For 1996, subscription rates are as follows-in the United States: personal, $250; institutional, $595; elsewhere by surface mail: personal, $350; institutional, $695; elsewhere by Air Cargo at a surcharge of $208. Information regarding other air mail postage rates is available from the Circulation Office. Subscribers are requested to notify the Circulation Office of the PROCEEDINGS 6 weeks in advance of any change of address; also the local postmaster. The Academy is not responsible for nonreceipt of issues because of an improper address unless a change of address is on file. The notice of address change should list both the old and new addresses. Claims for replacement copies will not be honored more than 60 days after the issue date for domestic subscribers and not more than 90 days after the issue date for foreign subscribers.

Single Copies: The price of a single issue is $30.00. Canadian GST Registration Number R-133130880. Seconld class posttag( pusiil ait Wcashisngtosn, DC, asned at addlitional mssailisng o/iccs. PRINTED IN THE USA PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (ISSN-0027-8424) is published biweekly by THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20418.

? 1996 by THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OE SCIENCES OE THE UNITED STATES OE AMERICA.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: PROCEEDINGS OE THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OE SCIENCES OE THE UNITED STATES OE AMERICA, 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC) 20418.

Cover photograph: Hil.dreth Meiere s emhlematic fi.gure depicting Chemistry: One of eight radial panels on the dome of the Great Hall at the National Acad.emy of Sciences.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 4: Front Matter

Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 93, June 1996

INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS

(Revised May 1996)

PURPOSE AND SCOPE

The PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES USA publishes research reports, commentaries, reviews, collo- quium papers, and actions of the Academy. In accordance with the guiding principles established by George Ellery Hale in 1914, the PROCEEDINGS publishes brief first announcements 6f the Members' and Foreign Associates' (hereafter referred to as the Members) more important contributions to research and of work that appears to a Member to be of particular importance.

RESEARCH REPORTS describe the results of original experi- mental or theoretical research of exceptional importance. The papers should be of the highest scientific quality and should be intelligible to a broad scientific audience.

COMMENTARIES call attention to papers of particular note and are written at the invitation of the Editorial Board.

REVIEWS are usually solicited by the Editorial Board. COLLOQUIUM PAPERS are reports of symposia held under

Academy auspices. EDITORIAL POLICIES

Submission and Review

Research Reports and Reviews may be submitted to the PROCEEDINGS through any of the following three tracks:

I. A Member of the Academy may "communicate" manu- scripts for non-members, provided that the communicating Member ensures that the paper undergoes thorough peer review 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 author(s)' institution(s).

II. Non-members of the Academy may now submit their manuscripts directly to the PROCEEDINGS office. These authors should provide in their submission letters the names of five Members who are expert in the paper's scientific area. The full list of Members appears in issue no. 1 (January 9, 1996) of the PROCEEDINGS and is also available on the Internet at the NAS Home Page: http://www.nas.edu. Upon receipt, a directly submitted manuscript will be assigned to a Member who agrees to act as the sponsor and will select the reviewers for the paper. The name of the Member, who is anonymous to the author until the paper is accepted, will be published in the PROCEED- INGS as communicator of the article.

III. A Member of the Academy 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.

Manuscripts rejected by one member cannot be resubmitted through another member.

Manuscripts submitted under any of the three tracks are also evaluated by the Editorial Board. The Board may subject manuscripts to further review and reject those that do not meet the standards of the journal.

Journal Policies

(i) Articles are accepted on condition that they have not been PUBLISHED previously or concurrently submitted for publication elsewhere.

(ii) AUTHORSHIP should be limited to those who have contributed substantially to the work. It is assumed that all listed authors concur in the submission.

(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 Na- tional Academy of Sciences, must be returned to the PRO- CEEDINGS office after the paper is accepted for publication.

(v) The Academy may distribute EMBARGOED copies of an article to the press prior to publication.

(vi) Manuscripts that report research involving HUMAN SUBJECTS or the use of materials of human origin must be accompanied by institutional authorization.

(vii) Submission of manuscripts on research using RECOM- BINANT DNA implies that physical and biological containment conformed to National Institutes of Health guidelines or those of a corresponding agency.

(viii) Submission of manuscripts on research using UNIQUE MATERIALS (e.g., cloned DNAs; antibodies; bacterial, animal, or plant cells; viruses; and computer programs) implies that the authors will make them available to qualified researchers for noncommercial use.

(ix) DATA BASES: Accession codes must be supplied for publication.

Nucleic Acid Sequences: Authors must submit these data to GenBank/EMBL/DNA Data Bank of Japan, and the acces- sion number of the sequence must be supplied for publication.

Crystallographic Studies of Proteins and Other Biopolymers Except Oligonucleotides: Authors must submit these data to the Protein Data Bank (PDB; Brookhaven National Laboratory).

Crystallographic Structures of Oligonucleotides: These data should be deposited directly with the Nucleic Acid Database. Once they are processed they will be forwarded to the PDB for inclusion in the central archive. To deposit the data, submit the coordinates, structure factors and current PDB deposition form to: [email protected]

PROCEDURES FOR SUBMITTING MANUSCRIPTS

Corresponding Author. The name, address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of the author(s) responsible for reviewing the page proofs and/or payment of the page charges should be supplied in the transmittal letter. Manu- scripts should be mailed to PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20418, or sent by express or courier service to 1010 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Suite 530, Washington, DC 20007. Telephone (202) 625-4725; FAX: (202) 625-4747.

Publication Charges. Page charges: The PROCEEDINGS de- pends, in part, on the payment of page charges for its opera- tion. It is anticipated that the page charge of $65 per printed page will be paid by all authors who have funds available for that purpose. Payment of the charge is expected but is not a condition of publication; articles are accepted or rejected only on the basis of merit. Requests for waiver of page charges should be directed to the Editor-in-Chief immediately on receipt of acceptance of the paper.

Color illustration charges: Author(s) must pay the additional cost of color illustrations. The cost is $850 for the first color figure, $300 for each additional color figure. A quotation will be sent to the corresponding author when the article is accepted, and written approval must be received before the color illustrations are processed.

Manuscript Preparation

Disks. To expedite both acceptance and publication, all manuscripts should be accompanied by a computer disk.

i

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 5: Front Matter

ii Information for Contributors Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93 (1996)

Manuscript Length. The PROCEEDINGS generally uses a two-column format having 60 characters, including spaces, per line. The length of a research article may be no more than 47,000 characters, including spaces. This includes 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 number of column-centimeters of figures (submitted at the desired printed size) x 180, plus The number of column-lines of tables (one column-line = 60 characters including spaces) x 60, plus A 120-character allowance for the space above and below each single column of a figure, table, or equation. If the character count of the word processing program used to prepare the manuscript excludes spaces, the appropriate num- ber can be obtained by adding the total number of words.

EXAMPLE:

Character Material count

All text (including title page, abstract, legends, references) characters plus spaces 25,660

Fig. 1 (single column, 16 cm deep) 2,880 Fig. 2 (single column, 12 cm deep) 2,160 Fig. 3 (single column, 21 cm deep) 3,780 Fig. 4 (single column, 11 cm deep) 1,980 Fig. 5 (double column, 17 cm deep) 6,120 Table 1 (double column, 23 lines deep) 2,760 Allowance

4 single-column figures 480 1 double-column figure 240 1 double-column table 240

Total characters in paper 46,300

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. Overlong papers will be returned to the author. Checklist for Submission:

Submit, with the cover letter, * Three complete copies (for track II submissions, four) of the

manuscript printed double-spaced, each accompanied by a set of figures of sufficient quality to judge the data.

* One computer disk of the text of the manuscript. Identify the platform and program in the transmittal letter.

* The total character count of the manuscript. MANUSCRIPT FORMAT

Title Page. The following information should be included on this page:

Classification: Select one category from the following. 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 com- plete address for each author. If there are authors with

different affiliations, use superscripts to match author(s) with institution(s). Identify the author to whom reprint requests should be addressed.

Abbreviations footnote: Nonstandard abbreviations used five or more times should be listed here. These should be defined where first mentioned in text and not used in the title or key terms.

Data deposition footnote: Supply all data base accession number(s) and/or code(s).

Abstract Page. Provide an abstract of no more than 250 words on page 2 of the manuscript. Abstracts should state the major contributions of the article and should be suitable for reproduction by abstracting services and on the Internet.

Text. Follow the spelling and usage given in Webster's Third New International Dictionary or the Random House Dictionary of the English Language. Avoid laboratory slang and jargon. Describe procedures in sufficient detail so that the work can be repeated. 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 uncom- mon reagents or instruments 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. Symbols should be used in the order , , :, ?, ?, ,k **, tt, **, ??, TT. Acknowledgments. Dedications, acknowledgments, and

funding sources are listed here. References. Only published or in-press papers and books

may be cited in the reference list, Abstracts of papers presented at meetings are not permissible. 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 ?20) should be named in the citation.

Databases are cited in the text or as footnotes. The corre- sponding author must 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., & Boller, 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. Figures that have been published elsewhere must be iden-

tified and the permission of the copyright holder must be provided.

Original drawings, laser prints, or high-quality photographs are required for reproduction. All illustrations should be submitted at the desired printed size. They should be identified on the reverse side and the orientation should be indicated.

Color Illustrations: Submit prints (unmounted or mounted on a flexible backing) at the desired printed size (in duplicate) or slides accompanied by a print or a color photocopy indi- cating magnification and cropping needed to achieve the desired printed size.

Tables are numbered (Arabic numerals) in the order in which they are cited in the text. Each table should be on a separate page and be printed double-spaced throughout.

Nomenclature and Style. International standards on nomen- clature should be used. Recommended style guides, nomen- clature, abbreviations, and symbols are listed on the Acade- my's Home Page: http://wxvw.nas.edu. A printed copy may be obtained from the PROCEEDINGS office.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 6: Front Matter

PROCEEDINGS OF THE

NATIO)NAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

June 11, 1996 Volume 93, Number 12 pp. 5675-6220

Table of Contents

CONDENSED INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS 1-11

AUTHOR INDEX ix-xi

POSITION AVAILABLE xiii

Commentaries A brief history of hemoglobins: Plant, animal, protist, 5675-5679 and bacteria

Ross C. Hardison

Protein minimization: Downsizing through mutation 5680-5681 William F. DeGrado and Tobin R. Sosnick

Inaugural Article

An endogenous rate of time preference, the Penrose 5770-5776 effect, and dynamic optimality of environmental quality

Hirofumi Uzawa

Physical Sciences

APPLIED MATHEMATICS

Kinetics of self-assembling microtubules: An "inverse 5975-5979 problem" in biochemistry

Henrik Flyvbjerg, Elmar Jobs, and Stanislas Leibler

CHEMISTRY

Direct observation of fast protein folding: The initial 5759-5764 collapse of apomyoglobin

R. M. Ballew, J. Sabelko, and M. Gruebele

Application of capillary electrophoresis-electrospray 6152-6157 ionization mass spectrometry in the determination of molecular diversity

Yuriy M. Dunayevskiy, Paul Vouros, Edward A. Wintner, Gerald W. Shipps, Thomas Carell, and Julius Rebek, Jr.

GEOLOGY

Earliest evolution associated with closure of the 6069-6072 Tropical American Seaway

Laurel S. Collins, Ann F. Budd, and Anthony G. Coates

Biological Sciences

BIOCHEMISTRY

Minimizing a binding domain from protein A 5688-5692 Andrew C. Braisted and James A. Wells

iii

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 7: Front Matter

Contents

Modifications of RNA processing modulate the 5693-5698 expression of hemoglobin genes

Panagoula Kollia, Eitan Fibach, Sonia M. Najjar, Alan N. Schechter, and Constance Tom Noguchi

Activation and phosphorylation of a pleckstrin 5699-5704 homology domain containing protein kinase (RAC-PK/PKB) promoted by serum and protein phosphatase inhibitors

Mirjana Andjelkovic, Teresa Jakubowicz, Peter Cron, Xiu-Fen Ming, Jeung-Whan Han, and Brian A. Hemmings

A gain-of-function of an amyotrophic lateral 5709-5714 sclerosis-associated Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase mutant: An enhancement of free radical formation due to a decrease in Km for hydrogen peroxide

Moon Bin Yim, Jung-Hoon Kang, Hyung-Soon Yim, Hahn-Shik Kwak, P. Boon Chock, and Earl R. Stadtman

Adenylate kinase complements nucleoside 5720-5725 diphosphate kinase deficiency in nucleotide metabolism

Qing Lu and Masayori Inouye

Msn2p, a zinc finger DNA-binding protein, is the 5777-5782 transcriptional activator of the multistress response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Anthony P. Schmitt and Kevin McEntee

Purification of the Drosophila RNA polymerase II 5788-5792 general transcription factors

Richard J. Austin and Mark D. Biggin

HslV-HslU: A novel ATP-dependent protease 5808-5813 complex in Escherichia coli related to the eukaryotic proteasome

Markus Rohrwild, Olivier Coux, H.-C. Huang, Richard P. Moerschell, Soon Ji Yoo, Jae Hong Seol, Chin Ha Chung, and Alfred L. Goldberg

Activating transcription from single stranded DNA 5830-5835 Takeshi Tomonaga and David Levens

Cloning of a novel estrogen receptor expressed in rat 5925-5930 prostate and ovary

George G. J. M. Kuiper, Eva Enmark, Markku Pelto-Huikko, Stefan Nilsson, and Jan-Ake Gustafsson

Leukotriene A4 hydrolase: Protection from 5931-5935 mechanism-based inactivation by mutation of tyrosine-378

Martin J. Mueller, Martina Blomster, Udo C. T. Oppermann, Hans Jornvall, Bengt Samuelsson, and Jesper Z. Haeggstr6m

Structure and conformational changes of DNA 5936-5940 topoisomerase II visualized by electron microscopy

Patrick Schultz, St6phane Olland, Pierre Oudet, and Ronald Hancock

Modulation of growth factor receptor function by 5947-5952 isoform heterodimerization

Wan-Pin Chang and Charles V. Clevenger

A tyrosine kinase profile of prostate carcinoma 5958-5962 Dan Robinson, Feng He, Tom Pretlow, and Hsing-Jien Kung

Molecular cloning of the Golgi apparatus uridine 5963-5968 diphosphate-N-acetylglucosamine transporter from Kluyveromyces lactis

Claudia Abeijon, Phillips W. Robbins, and Carlos B. Hirschberg

Functional expression of mouse Mdrl in an outer 5969-5974 membrane permeability mutant of Escherichia coli

Oded Beja and Eitan Bibi

Kinetics of self-assembling microtubules: An "inverse 5975-5979 problem" in biochemistry

Henrik Flyvbjerg, Elmar Jobs, and Stanislas Leibler

Molecular cloning of a phosphotyrosine-independent 5991-5995 ligand of the p56lck SH2 domain

Insil Joung, Jack L. Strominger, and Jaekyoon Shin

A new endogenous natriuretic factor: LLU-a 6002-6007 William J. Wechter, Darko Kantoci, E. David Murray, Jr., Derin C. D'Amico, Michael E. Jung, and Wen-Hui Wang

Suppression subtractive hybridization: A method for 6025-6030 generating differentially regulated or tissue-specific cDNA probes and libraries

Luda Diatchenko, Yun-Fai Chris Lau, Aaron P. Campbell, Alex Chenchik, Fauzia Moqadam, Betty Huang, Sergey Lukyanov, Konstantin Lukyanov, Nadya Gurskaya, Eugene D. Sverdlov, and Paul D. Siebert

A specific protein carboxyl methylesterase that 6043-6047 demethylates phosphoprotein phosphatase 2A in bovine brain

Jookyung Lee, Ying Chen, Tatiana Tolstykh, and Jeff Stock

Different cleavage sites are aligned differently in the 6085-6090 active site of Ml RNA, the catalytic subunit of Escherichia coli RNase P

Joanna Kufel and Leif A. Kirsebom

Selenocysteine, identified as the penultimate 6146-6151 C-terminal residue in human T-cell thioredoxin reductase, corresponds to TGA in the human placental gene

Vadim N. Gladyshev, Kuan-Teh Jeang, and Thressa C. Stadtman

Introduction of asymmetry in the naturally symmetric 6175-6180 restriction endonuclease EcoRV to investigate intersubunit communication in the homodimeric protein

Frank Stahl, Wolfgang Wende, Albert Jeltsch, and Alfred Pingoud

Subunit cleavage of mosquito pro-vitellogenin by a 6186-6190 subtilisin-like convertase

Jeng-Shong Chen and Alexander S. Raikhel

BIOPHYSICS

Miniature endplate current rise times <100 ,ts from 5747-5752 improved dual recordings can be modeled with passive acetylcholine diffusion from a synaptic vesicle

Joel R. Stiles, Dirk Van Helden, Thomas M. Bartol, Jr., Edwin E. Salpeter, and Miriam M. Salpeter

iv

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 8: Front Matter

Contents Direct observation of fast protein folding: The initial 5759-5764 collapse of apomyoglobin

R. M. Ballew, J. Sabelko, and M. Gruebele

Global properties of the mapping between local amino 5814-5818 acid sequence and local structure in proteins

Karen F. Han and David Baker

Voltage gating and permeation in a gap 5836-5841 junction hemichannel

E. Brady Trexler, Michael V. L. Bennett, Thaddeus A. Bargiello, and Vytas K. Verselis

Conformational trapping in a membrane environment: 5872-5876 A regulatory mechanism for protein activity?

S. Arumugam, S. Pascal, C. L. North, W. Hu, K.-C. Lee, M. Cotten, R. R. Ketchem, F. Xu, M. Brenneman, F. Kovacs, F. Tian, A. Wang, S. Huo, and T. A. Cross

CELL BIOLOGY

Antidiabetic thiazolidinediones inhibit leptin (ob) gene 5793-5796 expression in 3T3-L1 adipocytes

Caleb B. Kallen and Mitchell A. Lazar

Calcium-dependent oligonucleotide antagonists 5883-5887 specific for L-selectin

Dan O'Connell, Andrea Koenig, Susan Jennings, Brian Hicke, Hui-Ling Han, Tim Fitzwater, Ying-Fon Chang, Nissi Varki, David Parma, and Ajit Varki

G1 arrest and down-regulation of cyclin 5941-5946 E/cyclin-dependent kinase 2 by the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine are dependent on the retinoblastoma protein in the bladder carcinoma cell line 5637

Joachim B. Schnier, Kayoko Nishi, David W. Goodrich, and E. Morton Bradbury

Membrane healing and restoration of contractility 5996-6001 after mechanical injury in isolated skeletal muscle fibers of the frog

H. Gonzalez-Serratos, M. Rozycka, R. Cordoba-Rodriguez, and A. Ortega

Evidence from disruption of the lmcpb gene array of 6008-6013 Leishmania mexicana that cysteine proteinases are virulence factors

Jeremy C. Mottram, Augustine E. Souza, J. Elizabeth Hutchison, Roderick Carter, Mhairi J. Frame, and Graham H. Coombs

Cell cycle-dependent modulation of telomerase 6091-6095 activity in tumor cells

Xueli Zhu, Rakesh Kumar, Mahitosh Mandal, Neeta Sharma, Harsh W. Sharma, Urvashi Dhingra, John A. Sokoloski, Rongshen Hsiao, and Ramaswamy Narayanan

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY

Independent determination of symmetry and polarity 5737-5741 in the Drosophila eye

Kwang-Wook Choi, Brian Mozer, and Seymour Benzer

The embryonic transcription factor stage specific 5802-5807 activator protein contains a potent bipartite activation domain that interacts with several RNA polymerase II basal transcription factors

Jeffery DeFalco and Geoffrey Childs

Scatter factor/hepatocyte growth factor as a regulator 5866-5871 of skeletal muscle and neural crest development

Hisashi Takayama, William J. LaRochelle, Miriam Anver, Dale E. Bockman, and Glenn Merlino

Mutations in the rotated abdomen locus affect muscle 6048-6052 development and reveal an intrinsic asymmetry in Drosophila

Enrique Martin-Blanco and Antonio Garcfa-Bellido

Cell-type and promoter-context dependent retinoic 6197-6202 acid receptor (RAR) redundancies for RAR,B2 and Hoxa-1 activation in F9 and P19 cells can be artefactually generated by gene knockouts

Reshma Taneja, Bidyut Roy, Jean-Luc Plassat, Chris F. Zusi, Jacek Ostrowski, Peter R. Reczek, and Pierre Chambon

ECOLOGY

Maternal effort mediates the prevalence of 5726-5730 trypanosomes in the offspring of a passerine bird

Santiago Merino, Jaime Potti, and Juan Moreno

EVOLUTION

Similarities and dissimilarities of phage genomes 5854-5859 B. Edwin Blaisdell, Allan M. Campbell, and Samuel Karlin

Earliest evolution associated with closure of the 6069-6072 Tropical American Seaway

Laurel S. Collins, Ann F. Budd, and Anthony G. Coates

GENETICS

Segregation of DNA polynucleotide strands into sister 5765-5769 chromatids and the use of endoreduplicated cells to track sister chromatid exchanges induced by crosslinks, alkylations, or x-ray damage

Sheldon Wolff and Veena Afzal

A single gene mutation that increases maize 5824-5829 seed weight

Michael J. Giroux, Janine Shaw, Gerard Barry, B. Greg Cobb, Thomas Greene, Thomas Okita, and L. Curtis Hannah

A JAK-STAT pathway regulates wing vein 5842-5847 formation in Drosophila

Riqiang Yan, Hong Luo, James E. Darnell, Jr., and Charles R. Dearolf

Two genes abrogate the inhibition of murine 5848-5853 hepatocarcinogenesis by ovarian hormones

Therese M. Poole and Norman R. Drinkwater

Efficient in vivo manipulation of mouse genomic 5860-5865 sequences at the zygote stage

Merja Lakso, Jose G. Pichel, James R. Gorman, Brian Sauer, Yo Okamoto, Eric Lee, Frederick W. Alt, and Heiner Westphal

v

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 9: Front Matter

Contents

Complementation of the beige mutation in cultured 5905-5909 cells by episomally replicating murine yeast artificial chromosomes

Charles M. Perou, Monica J. Justice, Robert J. Pryor, and Jerry Kaplan

RIG-E, a human homolog of the murine Ly-6 family, 5910-5914 is induced by retinoic acid during the differentiation of acute promyelocytic leukemia cell

Mao Mao, Man Yu, Jian-Hua Tong, Jing Ye, Jun Zhu, Qiu-Hua Huang, Gang Fu, Long Yu, Shou-Yuan Zhao, Samuel Waxman, Michel Lanotte, Zhen-Yi Wang, Jia-Zhen Tan (C. C. Tan), Sai-Juan Chan, and Zhu Chen

Presynaptic association of Rad5l protein with selected 5920-5924 sites in meiotic chromatin

Annemieke W. Plug, Jihong Xu, Gurucharan Reddy, Efim I. Golub, and Terry Ashley

An Escherichia coli chromosomal "addiction module" 6059-6063 regulated by 3',5'-bispyrophosphate: A model for programmed bacterial cell death

Einat Aizenman, Hanna Engelberg-Kulka, and Gad Glaser

Novel human DNA alkyltransferases obtained by 6124-6128 random substitution and genetic selection in bacteria

Fred C. Christians and Lawrence A. Loeb

Age-specific inbreeding depression and components of 6140-6145 genetic variance in relation to the evolution of senescence

Brian Charlesworth and Kimberly A. Hughes

Generation of mice with a 200-kb amyloid precursor 6158-6162 protein gene deletion by Cre recombinase-mediated site-specific recombination in embryonic stem cells

Zhi-Wei Li, Gerlinde Stark, Jurgen Gotz, Thomas Rulicke, Ulrike Muller, and Charles Weissmann

Centromere mapping and orientation of the molecular 6163-6168 linkage map of rice (Oryza sativa L.)

Kuldeep Singh, Takashige Ishii, Arnold Parco, Ning Huang, Darshan S. Brar, and Gurdev S. Khush

Pantropic retroviral vectors integrate and express in 6181-6185 cells of the malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae

Tomoyo Matsubara, Richard W. Beeman, Hiroko Shike, Nora J. Besansky, Odette Mukabayire, Stephen Higgs, Anthony A. James, and Jane C. Burns

Flp recombinase promotes site-specific DNA 6191-6196 recombination in embryonic stem cells and transgenic mice

Susan M. Dymecki

IMMUNOLOGY

The nu gene acts cell-autonomously and is required 5742-5746 for differentiation of thymic epithelial progenitors

C. C. Blackburn, C. L. Augustine, R. Li, R. P. Harvey, M. A. Malin, R. L. Boyd, J. F. A. P. Miller, and G. Morahan

Granzyme A is critical for recovery of mice from 5783-5787 infection with the natural cytopathic viral pathogen, ectromelia

Arno Mullbacher, Klaus Ebnet, Robert V. Blanden, Ron Tha Hla, Thomas Stehle, Crisan Museteanu, and Markus M. Simon

Serological analysis of Melan-A(MART-1), a 5915-5919 melanocyte-specific protein homogeneously expressed in human melanomas

Yao-Tseng Chen, Elisabeth Stockert, Achim Jungbluth, Solam Tsang, Keren A. Coplan, Matthew J. Scanlan, and Lloyd J. Old

Novel unconventional binding site in the variable 6019-6024 region of immunoglobulins

Krishnan Rajagopalan, Gabriela Pavlinkova, Shoshana Levy, Phani Raj Pokkuluri, Marianne Schiffer, Boyd E. Haley, and Heinz Kohler

The association between glycosylphosphatidylinositol- 6053-6058 anchored proteins and heterotrimeric G protein a subunits in lymphocytes

Keith R. Solomon, Christopher E. Rudd, and Robert W. Finberg

Isolation of an immunodominant viral peptide that is 6135-6139 endogenously bound to the stress protein GP96/GRP94

Thomas J. F. Nieland, M. C. Agnes A. Tan, Monique Monnee-van Muijen, Frits Koning, Ada M. Kruisbeek, and Grada M. van Bleek

MEDICAL SCIENCES

Second generation hybrid polar compounds are potent 5705-5708 inducers of transformed cell differentiation

V. M. Richon, Y. Webb, R. Merger, T. Sheppard, B. Jursic, L. Ngo, F. Civoli, R. Breslow, R. A. Rifkind, and P. A. Marks

A new adenoviral vector: Replacement of all viral 5731-5736 coding sequences with 28 kb of DNA independently expressing both full-length dystrophin and 3-galactosidase

Stefan Kochanek, Paula R.Clemens, Kohnosuke Mitani, Hsiao-Huei Chen, Suzanne Chan, and C. Thomas Caskey

Stimulation of new bone formation by direct transfer 5753-5758 of osteogenic plasmid genes

Jianming Fang, Yao-Yao Zhu, Elizabeth Smiley, Jeffrey Bonadio, Jeffrey P. Rouleau, Steven A. Goldstein, Laurie K. McCauley, Beverly L. Davidson, and Blake J. Roessler

The recombinant proregion of transforming growth 5877-5882 factor 1 (Latency-associated peptide) inhibits active transforming growth factor ,B1 in transgenic mice

Erwin P. Bottinger, Valentina M. Factor, Monica L.-S. Tsang, James A. Weatherbee, Jeffrey B. Kopp, Su Wen Qian, Lalage M. Wakefield, Anita B. Roberts, Snorri S. Thorgeirsson, and Michael B. Sporn

vi

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 10: Front Matter

Contents Intercellular transfer of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol 5894-5898 (GPI)-linked protein: Release and uptake of CD4-GPI from recombinant adeno-associated virus-transduced HeLa cells

Stacie M. Anderson, Gang Yu, Mara Giattina, and Jeffery L. Miller

Urokinase-type plasminogen activator is effective in 5899-5904 fibrin clearance in the absence of its receptor or tissue-type plasminogen activator

Thomas H. Bugge, Matthew J. Flick, Mary Jo S. Danton, Cynthia C. Daugherty, John R0mer, Keld Dan0, Peter Carmeliet, Desire Collen, and Jay L. Degen

PR-39, a proline-rich antibacterial peptide that 6014-6018 inhibits phagocyte NADPH oxidase activity by binding to Src homology 3 domains of p47phox

Jishu Shi, Christopher R. Ross, Thomas L. Leto, and Frank Blecha

Human immunodeficiency virus tat gene transfer to 6073-6078 the murine central nervous system using a replication-defective herpes simplex virus vector stimulates transforming growth factor beta 1 gene expression

Siyamak Rasty, Prakash Thatikunta, Jennifer Gordon, Kamel Khalili, Shohreh Amini, and Joseph C. Glorioso

The molecular basis of Sanfilippo syndrome type B 6101-6105 Hong G. Zhao, Hong Hua Li, Gideon Bach, Artur Schmidtchen, and Elizabeth F. Neufeld

Recombination leads to the rapid emergence of 6106-6111 HIV-1 dually resistant mutants under selective drug pressure

Laure Moutouh, Jacques Corbeil, and Douglas D. Richman

Deregulation of PAX-5 by translocation of the Eb 6129-6134 enhancer of the IgH locus adjacent to two alternative PAX-5 promoters in a diffuse large-cell lymphoma

Meinrad Busslinger, Norman Klix, Peter Pfeffer, Paula G. Graninger, and Zbynek Kozmik

Modulation of AP-1 activity by the human 6169-6174 progesterone receptor in endometrial adenocarcinoma cells

Ana-Maria Bamberger, Christoph M. Bamberger, Birgit Gellersen, and Heinrich M. Schulte

Genomic cloning of methylthioadenosine 6203-6208 phosphorylase: A purine metabolic enzyme deficient in multiple different cancers

Tsutomu Nobori, Kenji Takabayashi, Phuoc Tran, Lisa Orvis, Ayse Batova, Alice L. Yu, and Dennis A. Carson

MICROBIOLOGY

priA suppressors in Escherichia coli relieve the proton 5953-5957 electrochemical gradient dependency of translocation of wild-type precursors

Nico Nouwen, Ben de Kruijff, and Jan Tommassen

Perpetuation of the agent of human granulocytic 6209-6214 ehrlichiosis in a deer tick-rodent cycle

Sam R. Telford III, Jacqueline E. Dawson, Paula Katavolos, Cynthia K. Warner, Christopher P. Kolbert, and David H. Persing

NEUROBIOLOGY

Receptor stimulation causes slow inhibition of IRK1 5819-5823 inwardly rectifying K+ channels by direct protein kinase A-mediated phosphorylation

Erhard Wischmeyer and Andreas Karschin

Promotion of sleep mediated by the A2a-adenosine 5980-5984 receptor and possible involvement of this receptor in the sleep induced by prostaglandin D2 in rats

Shinsuke Satoh, Hitoshi Matsumura, Fumio Suzuki, and Osamu Hayaishi

Substrate-bound agrin induces expression of 5985-5990 acetylcholine receptor ?-subunit gene in cultured mammalian muscle cells

Graham Jones, Alexander Herczeg, Markus A. Ruegg, Marianne Lichtsteiner, Stephan Kroger, and Hans Rudolf Brenner

The glycine binding site of the N-methyl-D-aspartate 6031-6036 receptor subunit NR1: Identification of novel determinants of co-agonist potentiation in the extracellular M3-M4 loop region

Hirokazu Hirai, Joachim Kirsch, Bodo Laube, Heinrich Betz, and Jochen Kuhse

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detection of the 6037-6042 murine brain response to light: Temporal differentiation and negative functional MRI changes

Wei Huang, Ildik6 Palyka, HaiFang Li, Edward M. Eisenstein, Nora D. Volkow, and Charles S. Springer, Jr.

An axoplasmic myosin with a calmodulin-like 6064-6068 light chain

Elaine L. Bearer, Joseph A. DeGiorgis, Howard Jaffe, Nelson A. Medeiros, and Thomas S. Reese

Behavioral genetics of thermosensation and 6079-6084 hygrosensation in Drosophila

Omer Sayeed and Seymour Benzer

Expression of corticotropin-releasing factor in 6096-6100 inflamed tissue is required for intrinsic peripheral opioid analgesia

Michael Schafer, Shaaban A. Mousa, Qin Zhang, Laurenda Carter, and Christoph Stein

Inhibition of sustained gamma oscillations (35-80 Hz) 6112-6117 by fast transient responses in cat visual cortex

Wolfgang Kruse and Reinhard Eckhorn

A single residue in the M2-M3 loop is a major 6118-6123 determinant of coupling between binding and gating in neuronal nicotinic receptors

Antonio Campos-Caro, Salvador Sala, Juan Jose Ballesta, Francisco Vicente-Agullo, Manuel Criado, and Francisco Sala

vii

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 11: Front Matter

Contents

PHARMACOLOGY

Mutation of a conserved serine in TM4 of opioid 5715-5719 receptors confers full agonistic properties to classical antagonists

Patricia A. Claude, Diane R. Wotta, X. H. Zhang, Paul L. Prather, Terry M. McGinn, Laurie J. Erickson, Horace H. Loh, and P. Y. Law

PHYSIOLOGY

The heart communicates with the kidney exclusively 6215-6219 through the guanylyl cyclase-A receptor: Acute handling of sodium and water in response to volume expansion

Ichiro Kishimoto, Susan K. Dubois, and David L. Garbers

PLANT BIOLOGY

A new hemoglobin gene from soybean: A role for 5682-5687 hemoglobin in all plants

Carol R. Andersson, Erik Ostergaard Jensen, Danny J. Llewellyn, Elizabeth S. Dennis, and W. James Peacock

Enhanced green fluorescence by the expression of an 5888-5893 Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein mutant in mono- and dicotyledonous plant cells

Christoph Reichel, Jaideep Mathur, Peter Eckes, Kerstin Langenkemper, Csaba Koncz, Jeff Schell, Bernd Reiss, and Christoph Maas

POPULATION BIOLOGY

Behavior predicts genetic structure in a wild 5797-5801 primate group

Jeanne Altmann, Susan C. Alberts, Susan A. Haines, Jean Dubach, Philip Muruthi, Trevor Coote, Eli Geffen, David J. Cheesman, Raphael S. Mututua, Serah N. Saiyalel, Robert K. Wayne, Robert C. Lacy, and Michael W. Bruford

Social Sciences

ECONOMIC SCIENCES

An endogenous rate of time preference, the Penrose 5770-5776 effect, and dynamic optimality of environmental quality

Hirofumi Uzawa

viii

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 16:19:26 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions


Recommended