Front MatterSource: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,Vol. 93, No. 17 (Aug. 20, 1996), pp. i-viiPublished by: National Academy of SciencesStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/39951 .
Accessed: 04/05/2014 04:51
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 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
PROCEEDINGS OF THE
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Au,gust20, 1996
Voluwme 93 / Nuwmber 17
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
PROCEEDINGS OF THE
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Officers of the Academy
BRUCE ALBERTS, President JACK HALPERN, Vice President PETER H. RAVEN, Home Secretary F. SHERWOOD ROWLAND, Foreign Secretary RONALD L. GRAHAM, Treasurer
Editor-in-Chief NICHOLAS R. COZZARELLI
Editorial Board of the Proceedings
PETER J. BICKEL ANTHONY CERAMI MICHAEL T. CLEGG MARSHALL H. COHEN STANLEY N. COHEN MAX D. COOPER JAMES E. DARNELL, JR. IGOR B. DAWID HERMAN N. EISEN RAYMOND L. ERIKSON RONALD M. EVANS NINA FEDOROFF CHARLES FEFFERMAN
JOSEPH L. GOLDSTEIN JACK HALPERN RICHARD A. LERNER HARVEY F. LODISH PHIL W. MAJERUS ARNO G. MOTULSKY RONALD L. PHILLIPS TOM POLLARD STANLEY B. PRUSINER CHARLES RADDING GIAN-CARLO ROTA DAVID D. SABATINI GOTTFRIED SCHATZ
PAUL R. SCHIMMEL STUART L. SCHREIBER CARLA J. SHATZ CHRISTOPHER A. SIMS ALLAN C. SPRADLING LARRY R. SQUIRE CHARLES F. STEVENS JOANNE STUBBE KARL K. TUREKIAN IRVING L. WEISSMAN SHERMAN M. WEISSMAN PETER G. WOLYNES
Publisher: KENNETH R. FULTON Acting Managing Editors: JOANNE D'AMIco, JOHN M. MALLOY 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 Fulfillment: JULIA A. LITTLE Office Assistant: CYNTHIA MATHEWS
Correspondence: 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: student, $90; personal, $250; institutional, $595; elsewhere by surface mail: student, $190; 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. Periodicals class postage paid at Washington, DC, and at additional mailing offices. 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 OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA, 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20418.
Cover photograph: Hildreth Meiere's interpretation of the insignia of the Academie des Sciences, Paris, founded in 1666: Great Hall at the National Academy of Sciences.
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 93, August 1996
INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS
(Revised July 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 of 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 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. A full list of Members appeared in Vol. 93, issue 1 (Jan. 9, 1996), and a list of those elected since then appeared in issue 9 (April 30, 1996); a complete list is on the Internet at the NAS Home Page: http://www.nas.edu. Upon receipt of a manuscript, a Member will be requested to act as the sponsor and to conduct the review as for Track I. The name of the Member, who is anonymous to the author until the paper is accepted, will be published in the PROCEEDINGS 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 subsequently 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. This form and all other forms are available on request and on the NAS Home Page.
(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 at [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 must be accompanied by a computer disk. The disk need not contain the figures.
i
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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. 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.
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
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 and on the disk label.
* The total character count (all as above, text plus figures plus tables) of the manuscript. A work sheet is available.
MANUSCRIPT FORMAT
Title Page. The following information should be included on this page:
Classification: Select one category from the following. Mul- tiple classifications are permitted only between major classi- fications (e.g., Physical Sciences, Biological Sciences). 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 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 uncommon 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 V, t, , ?, , I, **, 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 identified
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://www.nas.edu. A printed copy may be obtained from the PROCEEDINGS office.
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
PROCEEDINGS OF THE
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
August 20, 1996 Volume 93, Number 17 pp. 8797-9302
Table of Contents
INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS i-ii
AUTHOR INDEX ix-xii
Commentaries At the core of the Archaea 8797-8799
W. Ford Doolittle
Inferring the hydrophobic interaction from the 8800-8803 properties of neat water
B. J. Berne
Targeted transgenesis 8804-8808 Maria Jasin, Mary Ellen Moynahan, and Christine Richardson
Review Information processing in the human brain: 8809-8815 Magnetoencephalographic approach
Olli V. Lounasmaa, Matti Hamalainen, Riitta Hari, and Riitta Salmelin
Perspectives What ranks for research doctoral programs? 8816-8817
Saunders Mac Lane
Rating, not ranking 8818-8819 Stephen M. Stigler
Biological Sciences
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
Quantitative trait loci and metabolic pathways: 8820-8825 Genetic control of the concentration of maysin, a corn earworm resistance factor, in maize silks
P. F. Byrne, M. D. McMullen, M. E. Snook, T. A. Musket, J. M. Theuri, N. W. Widstrom, B. R. Wiseman, and E. H. Coe
APPLIED BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Direct atomic force microscope imaging of EcoRI 8826-8829 endonuclease site specifically bound to plasmid DNA molecules
D. P. Allison, P. S. Kerper, M. J. Doktycz, J. A. Spain, P. Modrich, F. W. Larimer, T. Thundat, and R. J. Warmack
iii
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Contents
BIOCHEMISTRY
Phosphorylated Ser/Arg-rich proteins: Limiting 8830-8835 factors in the assembly of 200S large nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles
Shmuel Yitzhaki, Elana Miriami, Ruth Sperling, and Joseph Sperling
Zinc- and iron-rubredoxins from Clostridium 8836-8840 pasteurianum at atomic resolution: A high-precision model of a ZnS4 coordination unit in a protein
Zbigniew Dauter, Keith S. Wilson, Larry C. Sieker, Jean-Marc Moulis, and Jacques Meyer
TnrA, a transcription factor required for global 8841-8845 nitrogen regulation in Bacillus subtilis
Lewis V. Wray, Jr., Amy E. Ferson, Kellie Rohrer, and Susan H. Fisher
A structure-based catalytic mechanism for the 8846-8851 xanthine oxidase family of molybdenum enzymes
Robert Huber, Peter Hof, Rui 0. Duarte, Jose J. G. Moura, Isabel Moura, Ming-Yih Liu, Jean LeGall, Russ Hille, Margarida Archer, and Maria J. Romao
Efficient expression of protein coding genes from the 8852-8857 murine Ul small nuclear RNA promoters
Jeffrey S. Bartlett, Manjiri Sethna, Lakshman Ramamurthy, Sally A. Gowen, R. Jude Samulski, and William F. Marzluff
The sigma subunit of Escherichia coli RNA 8858-8862 polymerase senses promoter spacing
Alicia J. Dombroski, Bradley D. Johnson, Michael Lonetto, and Carol A. Gross
The [(G/C)3NN],2 motif: A common DNA repeat that 8863-8867 excludes nucleosomes
Yuh-Hwa Wang and Jack D. Griffith
Dual regulation of open-complex formation and 8868-8872 promoter clearance by Arc explains a novel repressor to activator switch
Tracy L. Smith and Robert T. Sauer
New approach for inhibiting REV function and 8873-8877 HIV-1 production using the influenza virus NS1 protein
Xiao-yan Qian, Zhong-ying Chen, Jianbo Zhang, Arnold B. Rabson, and Robert M. Krug
Mutations affecting conserved cysteine residues within 8878-8883 the extracellular domain of Neu promote receptor dimerization and activation
Peter M. Siegel and William J. Muller
CREB binding protein acts synergistically with steroid 8884-8888 receptor coactivator-1 to enhance steroid receptor-dependent transcription
Carolyn L. Smith, Sergio A. Ofiate, Ming-Jer Tsai, and Bert W. O'Malley
Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB7 and VirB9 form a 8889-8894 disulfide-linked protein complex
Lorraine B. Anderson, Ann Vogel Hertzel, and Anath Das
Degradation of CYCJ mRNA in the yeast 8895-8900 Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not require translation
Ding-Fang Yun and Fred Sherman
Trypanosome U-deletional RNA editing involves 8901-8906 guide RNA-directed endonuclease cleavage, terminal U exonuclease, and RNA ligase activities
Jorge Cruz-Reyes and Barbara Sollner-Webb
Interaction of calcineurin with a domain of the 8907-8912 transcription factor NFAT1 that controls nuclear import
Chun Luo, Karen T.-Y. Shaw, Anuradha Raghavan, Jose Aramburu, Francisco Garcia-Cozar, Brian A. Perrino, Patrick G. Hogan, and Anjana Rao
Protein p4 represses phage (D29 A2c promoter by 8913-8918 interacting with the a subunit of Bacillus subtilis RNA polymerase
Maria Monsalve, Mario Mencia, Margarita Salas, and Fernando Rojo
The redox/DNA repair protein, Ref-1, is essential for 8919-8923 early embryonic development in mice
Steven Xanthoudakis, Richard J. Smeyne, James D. Wallace, and Tom Curran
Ribonuclease P (RNase P) RNA is converted to a 8924-8928 Cd2+-ribozyme by a single Rp-phosphorothioate modification in the precursor tRNA at the RNase P cleavage site
Jens M. Warnecke, Jens Peter Furste, Wolf-Dietrich Hardt, Volker A. Erdmann, and Roland K. Hartmann
Chromosomal double-strand break repair in 8929-8933 Ku80-deficient cells
Feng Liang, Peter J. Romanienko, David T. Weaver, Penny A. Jeggo, and Maria Jasin
Molecular characterization of the mosquito 8934-8939 vitellogenin receptor reveals unexpected high homology to the Drosophila yolk protein receptor
Thomas W. Sappington, Vladimir A. Kokoza, Wen-Long Cho, and Alexander S. Raikhel
Mammalian dwarfins are phosphorylated in response 8940-8944 to transforming growth factor 13 and are implicated in control of cell growth
Jonathan M. Yingling, Pradeep Das, Cathy Savage, Ming Zhang, Richard W. Padgett, and Xiao-Fan Wang
BIOPHYSICS
Unraveling principles of lead discovery: From 8945-8950 unfrustrated energy landscapes to novel molecular anchors
Paul A. Rejto and Gennady M. Verkhivker
An information theory model of hydrophobic 8951-8955 interactions
Gerhard Hummer, Shekhar Garde, Angel E. Garcia, Andrew Pohorille, and Lawrence R. Pratt
CELL BIOLOGY
FRAGJ, a gene that potently activates fibroblast 8956-8961 growth factor receptor by C-terminal fusion through chromosomal rearrangement
Matthew V. Lorenzi, Yoshihiro Horii, Ryuya Yamanaka, Kazushige Sakaguchi, and Toru Miki
iv
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Contents A maize cDNA encoding a member of the 8962-8967 retinoblastoma protein family: Involvement in endoreduplication
Gideon Grafi, Ronald J. Burnett, Tim Helentjaris, Brian A. Larkins, James A. DeCaprio, William R. Sellers, and William G. Kaelin, Jr.
Interleaflet clear space is reduced in the membrane of 8968-8970 COP I and COP 11-coated buds/vesicles
Lelio Orci, Randy Schekman, and Alain Perrelet
Reversible immortalization of mammalian cells 8971-8976 mediated by retroviral transfer and site-specific recombination
Karen A. Westerman and Philippe Leboulch
UV irradiation-induced apoptosis leads to activation 8977-8982 of a 36-kDa myelin basic protein kinase in HL-60 cells
Michael L. Lu, Mitsuhiro Sato, Boliang Cao, and Jerome P. Richie
Telomeric repeats (TTAGGC), are sufficient for 8983-8988 chromosome capping function in Caenorhabditis elegans
Chantal Wicky, Anne M. Villeneuve, Nathalie Lauper, Laurence Codourey, Heinz Tobler, and Fritz Muller
The methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris synthesizes a 8989-8994 functionally active chromophore precursor of the plant photoreceptor phytochrome
Shu-Hsing Wu and J. Clark Lagarias
Poly(a2,8-deaminoneuraminic acid) is expressed in 8995-8998 lung on a single 150-kDa glycoprotein and is an oncodevelopmental antigen
Baoxi Qu, Martin Ziak, Christian Zuber, and Jiirgen Roth
Alteration of myosin cross bridges by phosphorylation 8999-9003 of myosin-binding protein C in cardiac muscle
Andrea Weisberg and Saul Winegrad
DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
A human homologue of the Drosophila sex 9004-9009 determination factor transformer-2 has conserved splicing regulatory functions
Brigitte Dauwalder, Felipe Amaya-Manzanares, and William Mattox
RXR-y null mice are apparently normal and 9010-9014 compound RXRa+'-/RXR3-/-/RXRy-'- mutant mice are viable
Wojciech Kreiel, Valerie Dup6, Manuel Mark, Andree Dierich, Philippe Kastner, and Pierre Chambon
Induction of insulin and islet amyloid polypeptide 9015-9020 production in pancreatic islet glucagonoma cells by insulin promoter factor 1
Palle Serup, Jan Jensen, Frank G. Andersen, Mette C. Jorgensen, Niels Blume, Jens J. Holst, and Ole D. Madsen
Induction of nephrogenic mesenchyme by osteogenic 9021-9026 protein 1 (bone morphogenetic protein 7)
Slobodan Vukicevic, Jeffrey B. Kopp, Frank P. Luyten, and T. Kuber Sampath
Evolutionary conservation of sequence elements 9027-9032 controlling cytoplasmic polyadenylylation
Arturo C. Verrotti, Sunnie R. Thompson, Christopher Wreden, Sidney Strickland, and Marvin Wickens
EVOLUTION
Duplication and functional divergence in the chalcone 9033-9038 synthase gene family of Asteraceae: Evolution with substrate change and catalytic simplification
Yrjo Helariutta, Mika Kotilainen, Paula Elomaa, Nisse Kalkkinen, K'are Bremer, Teemu H. Teeri, and Victor A. Albert
Conserved catalytic machinery and the prediction of a 9302 common fold for several families of glycosyl hydrolases (Correction)
Bernard Henrissat, Isabelle Callebaut, Sylvie Fabrega, Pierre Lehn, Jean-Paul Mornon, and Gideon Davies
GENETICS
Activation of the human homologue of the Drosophila 9039-9042 sina gene in apoptosis and tumor suppression
Mona Nemani, Gustavo Linares-Cruz, Heriberto Bruzzoni-Giovanelli, Jean-Pierre Roperch, Marcel Tuynder, Lydie Bougueleret, Dorra Cherif, Monia Medhioub, Patricia Pasturaud, VWronique Alvaro, Hera Der Sarkissan, Lucien Cazes, Denis Le Paslier, Isabelle Le Gall, David Israeli, Jean Dausset, Francois Sigaux, Ilya Chumakov, Moshe Oren, Fabien Calvo, Robert B. Amson, Daniel Cohen, and Adam Telerman
Synaptonemal complex (SC) component Zipl plays a 9043-9048 role in meiotic recombination independent of SC polymerization along the chromosomes
Aurora Storlazzi, Liuzhong Xu, Anthony Schwacha, and Nancy Kleckner
APC mutations in colorectal tumors with mismatch 9049-9054 repair deficiency
Jian Huang, Nickolas Papadopoulos, Aileen J. McKinley, Susan M. Farrington, Lucy J. Curtis, Andrew H. Wyllie, Shu Zheng, James K. V. Willson, Sanford D. Markowitz, Pat Morin, Kenneth W. Kinzler, Bert Vogelstein, and Malcolm G. Dunlop
The ocular albinism type 1 gene product is a 9055-9060 membrane glycoprotein localized to melanosomes
M. Vittoria Schiaffino, Cinzia Baschirotto, Graziella Pellegrini, Simona Montalti, Carlo Tacchetti, Michele De Luca, and Andrea Ballabio
Gene recognition via spliced sequence alignment 9061-9066 Mikhail S. Gelfand, Andrey A. Mironov, and Pavel A. Pevzner
Single-copy transgenic mice with chosen-site 9067-9072 integration
Sarah K. Bronson, Elizabeth G. Plaehn, Kimberly D. Kluckman, John R. Hagaman, Nobuyo Maeda, and Oliver Smithies
V
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Contents
Analysis of genetic instability during mammary tumor 9073-9078 progression using a novel selection-based assay for in vivo mutations in a bacteriophage A transgene target
John L. Jakubczak, Glenn Merlino, John E. French, William J. Muller, Brian Paul, Sankar Adhya, and Susan Garges
The genetic basis of epidermolysis bullosa simplex 9079-9084 with mottled pigmentation
Jai Uttam, Elizabeth Hutton, Pierre A. Coulombe, Ingrun Anton-Lamprecht, Qian-Chun Yu, Tobias Gedde-Dahl, Jr., Jo-David Fine, and Elaine Fuchs
IMMUNOLOGY
Local production of the p40 subunit of interleukin 12 9085-9089 suppresses T-helper 1-mediated immune responses and prevents allogeneic myoblast rejection
Kazunori Kato, Osamu Shimozato, Kenichi Hoshi, Hiroaki Wakimoto, Hirofumi Hamada, Hideo Yagita, and Ko Okumura
Caffeic acid phenethyl ester is a potent and specific 9090-9095 inhibitor of activation of nuclear transcription factor NF-KB
K. Natarajan, Sanjaya Singh, Terrence R. Burke, Jr., Dezider Grunberger, and Bharat B. Aggarwal
Chromosomal localization of the proteasome Z 9096-9101 subunit gene reveals an ancient chromosomal duplication involving the major histocompatibility complex
Masanori Kasahara, Masaru Hayashi, Keiji Tanaka, Hidetoshi Inoko, Kimihiko Sugaya, Toshimichi Ikemura, and Teruo Ishibashi
Expression of a second receptor rescues self-specific T 9102-9107 cells from thymic deletion and allows activation of autoreactive effector function
Tomasz Zal, Siegfried Weiss, Andrew Mellor, and Brigitta Stockinger
Differential inhibition of the Fas- and 9108-9113 granule-mediated cytolysis pathways by the orthopoxvirus cytokine response modifier A/SPI-2 and SPI-1 protein
Joanne L. Macen, Rosemary S. Garner, Pierre Y. Musy, Michael A. Brooks, Peter C. Turner, Richard W. Moyer, Grant McFadden, and R. Chris Bleackley
Nitric oxide regulates vascular cell adhesion molecule 9114-9119 1 gene expression and redox-sensitive transcriptional events in human vascular endothelial cells
Bobby V. Khan, David G. Harrison, Matthew T. Olbrych, R. Wayne Alexander, and Russell M. Medford
MEDICAL SCIENCES
Menstrual breakdown of human endometrium can be 9120-9125 mimicked in vitro and is selectively and reversibly blocked by inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases
Etienne Marbaix, Isabelle Kokorine, Pierre Moulin, Jacques Donnez, Yves Eeckhout, and Pierre J. Courtoy
Thrombopoietin rescues in vitro erythroid colony 9126-9131 formation from mouse embryos lacking the erythropoietin receptor
Mark W. Kieran, Andrew C. Perkins, Stuart H. Orkin, and Leonard I. Zon
Phosphorylation by protein kinase C of serine-23 of 9132-9137 the a-1 subunit of rat Na+,K+-ATPase affects its conformational equilibrium
Ninel S. Logvinenko, Irina Dulubova, Natalya Fedosova, Stefan H. Larsson, Angus C. Nairn, Mikael Esmann, Paul Greengard, and Anita Aperia
Iron chelates bind nitric oxide and decrease mortality 9138-9141 in an experimental model of septic shock
Wieslaw M. Kazmierski, Gerald Wolberg, Joan G. Wilson, Sheila R. Smith, Darryl S. Williams, H. Holden Thorp, and Luis Molina
Neuronal nitric oxide synthase and dystrophin- 9142-9147 deficient muscular dystrophy
Wen-Jinn Chang, Susan T. lannaccone, Kim S. Lau, Bettie Sue S. Masters, Timothy J. McCabe, Kirk McMillan, Roanna C. Padre, Melissa J. Spencer, James G. Tidball, and James T. Stull
Activation of Jak/STAT proteins involved in signal 9148-9153 transduction pathway mediated by receptor for interleukin 2 in malignant T lymphocytes derived from cutaneous anaplastic large T-cell lymphoma and Sezary syndrome
Qian Zhang, Irena Nowak, Eric C. Vonderheid, Alain H. Rook, Marshall E. Kadin, Peter C. Nowell, Leslie M. Shaw, and Mariusz A. Wasik
Suppression of tumorigenicity by the wild-type 9154-9159 tuberous sclerosis 2 (Tsc2) gene and its C-terminal region
Fang Jin, Ralf Wienecke, Guang-Hui Xiao, John C. Maize, Jr., Jeffrey E. DeClue, and Raymond S. Yeung
The melanoma differentiation associated gene mda-7 9160-9165 suppresses cancer cell growth
Hongping Jiang, Zao-Zhong Su, Jiao Jiao Lin, Neil I. Goldstein, Charles S. H. Young, and Paul B. Fisher
Cellular oxidative stress and the control of apoptosis 9166-9171 by wild-type p53, cytotoxic compounds, and cytokines
Joseph Lotem, Mira Peled-Kamar, Yoram Groner, and Leo Sachs
Microsatellite instability in childhood 9172-9176 rhabdomyosarcoma is locus specific and correlates with fractional allelic loss
Mike Visser, Johannes Bras, Carin Sijmons, Peter Devilee, Liliane C. D. Wijnaendts, J. C. van der Linden, P. A. Voute, and Frank Baas
Trials of the f model for complex inheritance 9177-9181 A. Collins, C. J. MacLean, and N. E. Morton
The differential adhesion forces of anterior cruciate 9182-9187 and medial collateral ligament fibroblasts: Effects of tropomodulin, talin, vinculin, and t-actinin
K.-L. Paul Sung, Li Yang, Darren E. Whittemore, Yan Shi, Gang Jin , Adam H. Hsieh, Wayne H. Akeson, and L. Amy Sung
vi
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Contents
MICROBIOLOGY
Perspectives on archaeal diversity, thermophily and 9188-9193 monophyly from environmental rRNA sequences
Susan M. Barns, Charles F. Delwiche, Jeffrey D. Palmer, and Norman R. Pace
Epstein-Barr viral latency is disrupted by the 9194-9199 immediate-early BRLF1 protein through a cell-specific mechanism
Sunita Zalani, Elizabeth Holley-Guthrie, and Shannon Kenney
NEUROBIOLOGY
Cloning, expression, and distribution of a 9200-9205 Ca2+-activated K+ channel (3-subunit from human brain
Julie Tseng-Crank, Nathalie Godinot, Teit E. Johansen, Philip K. Ahring, Dorte Str0baek, Robert Mertz, Christine D. Foster, S0ren-Peter Olesen, and Peter H. Reinhart
Operant conditioning of H-reflex changes synaptic 9206-9211 terminals on primate motoneurons
Kuo Ching Feng-Chen and Jonathan R. Wolpaw
Memory for object features versus memory for object 9212-9217 location: A positron-emission tomography study of encoding and retrieval processes
Adrian M. Owen, Brenda Milner, Michael Petrides, and Alan C. Evans
Polarity of microtubule assemblies during neuronal 9218-9222 cell migration
Pasko Rakic, Elizabeth Knyihar-Csillik, and Bertalan Csillik
Expression and analysis of presenilin 1 in a human 9223-9228 neuronal system: Localization in cell bodies and dendrites
David G. Cook, Jane C. Sung, Todd E. Golde, Kevin M. Felsenstein, Boguslaw S. Wojczyk, Rudolph E. Tanzi, John Q. Trojanowski, Virginia M.-Y. Lee, and Robert W. Doms
Cell death in the Schwann cell lineage and its 9229-9234 regulation by neuregulin
Daniel E. Syroid, Peter R. Maycox, Patrick G. Burrola, Naili Liu, Duanzhi Wen, Kuo-Fen Lee, Greg Lemke, and Trevor J. Kilpatrick
Single photon emission computerized tomography 9235-9240 imaging of amphetamine-induced dopamine release in drug-free schizophrenic subjects
Marc Laruelle, Anissa Abi-Dargham, Christopher H. van Dyck, Roberto Gil, Cyril D. D'Souza, Joseph Erdos, Elinore McCance, William Rosenblatt, Christine Fingado, Sami S. Zoghbi, Ronald M. Baldwin, John P. Seibyl, John H. Krystal, Dennis S. Charney, and Robert B. Innis
Agonist-selective endocytosis of ,u opioid receptor by 9241-9246 neurons in vivo
Catia Sternini, Marvin Spann, Benito Anton, Duane E. Keith, Jr., Nigel W. Bunnett, Mark von Zastrow, Christopher Evans, and Nicholas C. Brecha
Identification of ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) 9247-9252 residues essential for leukemia inhibitory factor receptor binding and generation of CNTF receptor antagonists
Annalise Di Marco, Isabelle Gloaguen, Rita Graziani, Giacomo Paonessa, Isabella Saggio, Keith R. Hudson, and Ralph Laufer
Direct modulation of calmodulin targets by the 9253-9258 neuronal calcium sensor NCS-1
Nicolas C. Schaad, Edouard De Castro, Serge Nef, Sarah Hegi, Robert Hinrichsen, Maryann E. Martone, Mark H. Ellisman, Robert Sikkink, Frank Rusnak, Jurgen Sygush, and Patrick Nef
A mutation that alters magnesium block of 9259-9263 N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor channels
Geeta Sharma and Charles F. Stevens
Lambert-Eaton sera reduce low-voltage and 9264-9269 high-voltage activated Ca2+ currents in murine dorsal root ganglion neurons
Kelly D. Garcia, Michelle Mynlieff, Donald B. Sanders, Kurt G. Beam, and John P. Walrond
PHARMACOLOGY
Common molecular determinants of local anesthetic, 9270-9275 antiarrhythmic, and anticonvulsant block of voltage-gated Na+ channels
David S. Ragsdale, Jancy C. McPhee, Todd Scheuer, and William A. Catterall
Involvement of Asn-293 in stereospecific agonist 9276-9281 recognition and in activation of the 12-adrenergic receptor
Kerstin Wieland, Helene M. Zuurmond, Cornelius Krasel, Ad P. IJzerman, and Martin J. Lohse
PLANT BIOLOGY
Auxin as a positional signal in pattern formation 9282-9286 in plants
Claes Uggla, Thomas Moritz, Goran Sandberg, and Bjorn Sundberg
Expression of catalytically active barley glutamyl 9287-9291 tRNAGlu reductase in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase
Ute C. Vothknecht, C. Gamini Kannangara, and Diter von Wettstein
SPINDLY, a tetratricopeptide repeat protein involved 9292-9296 in gibberellin signal transduction inArabidopsis
Steven E. Jacobsen, Kalli A. Binkowski, and Neil E. Olszewski
Genetic identification of a gene involved in 9297-9301 constitutive, high-affinity nitrate transport in higher plants
Rongchen Wang and Nigel M. Crawford
vii
This content downloaded from 130.132.123.28 on Sun, 4 May 2014 04:51:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions