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Robert L. Ratliff

Los Alamos National Laboratory

Publishes on DNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry, Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms. 92 papers and 8.4k citations.

92Publications
8.4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A highly conserved repetitive DNA sequence, (TTAGGG)n, present at the telomeres of human chromosomes.
Robert K. Moyzis, Judy M. Buckingham, L. Scott Cram et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1988
Cited by 2.4kOpen Access

A highly conserved repetitive DNA sequence, (TTAGGG)n, has been isolated from a human recombinant repetitive DNA library. Quantitative hybridization to chromosomes sorted by flow cytometry indicates that comparable amounts of this sequence are present on each human chromosome. Both fluorescent in situ hybridization and BAL-31 nuclease digestion experiments reveal major clusters of this sequence at the telomeres of all human chromosomes. The evolutionary conservation of this DNA sequence, its terminal chromosomal location in a variety of higher eukaryotes (regardless of chromosome number or chromosome length), and its similarity to functional telomeres isolated from lower eukaryotes suggest that this sequence is a functional human telomere.

Conservation of the human telomere sequence (TTAGGG)n among vertebrates.
J. Meyne, Robert L. Ratliff, Robert K. Moyzis|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1989
Cited by 846Open Access

To determine the evolutionary origin of the human telomere sequence (TTAGGG)n, biotinylated oligodeoxynucleotides of this sequence were hybridized to metaphase spreads from 91 different species, including representative orders of bony fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds, and mammals. Under stringent hybridization conditions, fluorescent signals were detected at the telomeres of all chromosomes, in all 91 species. The conservation of the (TTAGGG)n sequence and its telomeric location, in species thought to share a common ancestor over 400 million years ago, strongly suggest that this sequence is the functional vertebrate telomere.