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William Kubasek

Harvard University

Publishes on Advanced Breast Cancer Therapies, HER2/EGFR in Cancer Research, Microtubule and mitosis dynamics. 44 papers and 2.1k citations.

44Publications
2.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Analysis of <i>Arabidopsis</i> mutants deficient in flavonoid biosynthesis
A. Winkel, William Kubasek, Gisela Storz et al.|The Plant Journal|1995
Cited by 602

Eleven loci that play a role in the synthesis of flavonoids in Arabidopsis are described. Mutations at these loci, collectively named transparent testa (tt), disrupt the synthesis of brown pigments in the seed coat (testa). Several of these loci (tt3, tt4, tt5 and ttg) are also required for the accumulation of purple anthocyanins in leaves and stems and one locus (ttg) plays additional roles in trichome and root hair development. Specific functions were previously assigned to tt1-7 and ttg. Here, the results of additional genetic, biochemical and molecular analyses of these mutants are described. Genetic map positions were determined for tt8, tt9 and tt10. Thin-layer chromatography identified tissue- and locus-specific differences in the flavonols and anthocyanidins synthesized by mutant and wild-type plants. It was found that UV light reveals distinct differences in the floral tissues of tt3, tt4, tt5, tt6 and ttg, even though these tissues are indistinguishable under visible light. Evidence was also uncovered that tt8 and ttg specifically affect dihydroflavonol reductase gene expression. A summary of these and previously published results are incorporated into an overview of the genetics of flavonoid biosynthesis in Arabidopsis.

Regulation of Flavonoid Biosynthetic Genes in Germinating Arabidopsis Seedlings.
William Kubasek, B. W. Shirley, Ann McKillop et al.|The Plant Cell|1992
Cited by 337Open Access

Many higher plants, including Arabidopsis, transiently display purple anthocyanin pigments just after seed germination. We observed that steady state levels of mRNAs encoded by four flavonoid biosynthetic genes, PAL1 (encoding phenylalanine ammonia-lyase 1), CHS (encoding chalcone synthase), CHI (encoding chalcone isomerase), and DFR (encoding dihydroflavonol reductase), were temporally regulated, peaking in 3-day-old seedlings grown in continuous white light. Except for the case of PAL1 mRNA, mRNA levels for these flavonoid genes were very low in seedlings grown in darkness. Light induction studies using seedlings grown in darkness showed that PAL1 mRNA began to accumulate before CHS and CHI mRNAs, which, in turn, began to accumulate before DFR mRNA. This order of induction is the same as the order of the biosynthetic steps in flavonoid biosynthesis. Our results suggest that the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway is coordinately regulated by a developmental timing mechanism during germination. Blue light and UVB light induction experiments using red light- and dark-grown seedlings showed that the flavonoid biosynthetic genes are induced most effectively by UVB light and that blue light induction is mediated by a specific blue light receptor.

Investigation of far-infrared vibrational modes in polynucleotides
J. W. Powell, Glenn S. Edwards, L. Genzel et al.|Physical review. A, General physics|1987
Cited by 163

Far-infrared measurements (40--500 ${\mathrm{cm}}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}1}$) of vacuum-dried, free-standing, unoriented films of the polynucleotides poly(dA)\ensuremath{\cdot}poly(dT), poly(dA-dT)\ensuremath{\cdot}poly(dA-dT), and poly(dG)\ensuremath{\cdot}poly(dC) and the ribonucleotide poly(rA)\ensuremath{\cdot}poly(rU) under various salting conditions are reported. Spectral features that depend on temperature, crystallinity, and salting conditions have been observed. Of most interest are four sharp bands near 63, 83, 100, and 110 ${\mathrm{cm}}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}1}$ in polycrystalline poly(dA)\ensuremath{\cdot}poly(dT). These low-frequency (240 ${\mathrm{cm}}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}1}$) observations are discussed in terms of a lattice-dynamical model of homopolymer DNA.

Laser cross-linking of nucleic acids to proteins. Methodology and first applications to the phage T4 DNA replication system.
Joel W. Hockensmith, William Kubasek, William R. Vorachek et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1986
Cited by 122Open Access

Single-pulse (approximately 8 ns) ultraviolet laser excitation of protein-nucleic acid complexes can result in efficient and rapid covalent cross-linking of proteins to nucleic acids. The reaction produces no nucleic acid-nucleic acid or protein-protein cross-links, and no nucleic acid degradation. The efficiency of cross-linking is dependent on the wavelength of the exciting radiation, on the nucleotide composition of the nucleic acid, and on the total photon flux. The yield of cross-links/laser pulse is largest between 245 and 280 nm; cross-links are obtained with far UV photons (200-240 nm) as well, but in this range appreciable protein degradation is also observed. The method has been calibrated using the phage T4-coded gene 32 (single-stranded DNA-binding) protein interaction with oligonucleotides, for which binding constants have been measured previously by standard physical chemical methods (Kowalczykowski, S. C., Lonberg, N., Newport, J. W., and von Hippel, P. H. (1981) J. Mol. Biol. 145, 75-104). Photoactivation occurs primarily through the nucleotide residues of DNA and RNA at excitation wavelengths greater than 245 nm, with reaction through thymidine being greatly favored. The nucleotide residues may be ranked in order of decreasing photoreactivity as: dT much greater than dC greater than rU greater than rC, dA, dG. Cross-linking appears to be a single-photon process and occurs through single nucleotide (dT) residues; pyrimidine dimer formation is not involved. Preliminary studies of the individual proteins of the five-protein T4 DNA replication complex show that gene 43 protein (polymerase), gene 32 protein, and gene 44 and 45 (polymerase accessory) proteins all make contact with DNA, and can be cross-linked to it, whereas gene 62 (polymerase accessory) protein cannot. A survey of other nucleic acid-binding proteins has shown that E. coli RNA polymerase, DNA polymerase I, and rho protein can all be cross-linked to various nucleic acids by the laser technique. The potential uses of this procedure in probing protein-nucleic acid interactions are discussed.