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Donald R. Bennett

Solana Networks (Canada)

Publishes on Epilepsy research and treatment, EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces, Trauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, Resuscitation. 69 papers and 2.1k citations.

69Publications
2.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Short direct repeats flank the T-DNA on a nopaline Ti plasmid
Narendra Singh Yadav, Jos Vanderleyden, Donald R. Bennett et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1982
Cited by 255Open Access

Crown gall disease results from the insertion of a segment of the Agrobacterium Ti plasmid, called T-DNA, into host plant nuclear DNA. We have subjected to sequence analysis the border regions of pTi T37 (ends of T-DNA) and one left T-DNA/plant DNA border fragment isolated from BT37 tobacco teratoma by molecular cloning. These sequence studies, taken together with published sequence of a right T-DNA/plant DNA border fragment, allowed us to identify the positions of left and right borders at the DNA sequence level. Comparison of left and right border regions of the Ti plasmid revealed a "core" direct repeat of 13 of 14 bases (12 contiguous) precisely at the borders of T-DNA. An extended repeat of 21 of 25 bases overlaps this core repeat. T-DNA on the Ti plasmid exhibits no longer direct or inverted repeats in the border regions, based on Southern hybridization studies. The physical structure of T-DNA differs from that of known prokaryotic and eukaryotic transposable elements but bears a structural resemblance to the prophage of bacteriophage lambda.

Efficacy of Sleep Deprivation as an Activation Procedure in Epilepsy Patients
Robert J. Ellingson, Kathleen Wilken, Donald R. Bennett|Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology|1984
Cited by 137

The primary purpose of this article is to determine whether sleep deprivation (SD) of 24 h or longer has been demonstrated to be an effective procedure for eliciting epileptiform and/or seizure patterns in the EEG in epilepsy patients as compared with those of nonepileptics. The relevant literature is reviewed, first chronologically and then critically. Methodological problems are discussed. Although no absolutely definitive study has been done, the preponderance of evidence supports the conclusion that SD is effective in activating the EEGs of epileptics. Recommendations concerning the application of SD are offered.