C

Carl W. Schmid

California Institute of Technology

Publishes on RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms, DNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry, Chromosomal and Genetic Variations. 122 papers and 10.3k citations.

122Publications
10.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The Alu Family of Dispersed Repetitive Sequences
Cited by 609

A family of related sequences that includes approximately 500,000 members is the most prominent short dispersed repeat family in primate and rodent DNA's. The primate sequence is approximately 300 base pairs in length and is composed of two imperfectly repeated monomer units, whereas the rodent repeat consists of only a single monomer. Properties of this repeat sequence, its flanking sequences in chromosomal DNA, and RNA's transcribed from it suggest that it may be a mobile DNA element inserted at hundreds of thousands of different chromosomal locations.

Ubiquitous, interspersed repeated sequences in mammalian genomes.
Warren R. Jelinek, T P Toomey, Leslie A. Leinwand et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1980
Cited by 567Open Access

DNA base sequence comparisons demonstrate that the principal family of 300-nucleotide interspersed human DNA sequences, the repetitive double-strand regions of HeLa cell heterogeneous nuclear RNA, and specific RNA polymerase III in vitro transcripts of cloned human DNA sequences are all representatives of a closely related family of sequences. A segment of approximately 30 residues of these sequences is highly conserved in mammalian evolution because it is also present in the interspersed repeated DNA sequences of Chinese hamsters. Further DNA sequence comparisons demonstrate that a portion of this highly conserved segment of repetitive mamalian DNA sequence is similar to a sequence found within a low molecular weight RNA that hydrogen-bonds to poly(A)-terminated RNA molecules of Chinese hamsters and a sequence that forms half of a perfect inverted repeat near the origin of DNA replication in papovaviruses.