S

Sydney Brenner

Agency for Science, Technology and Research

Publishes on RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms, Bacteriophages and microbial interactions, Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies. 413 papers and 60k citations.

413Publications
60kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

THE GENETICS OF <i>CAENORHABDITIS ELEGANS</i>
Sydney Brenner|Genetics|1974
Cited by 15.4kOpen Access

Methods are described for the isolation, complementation and mapping of mutants of Caenorhabditis elegans, a small free-living nematode worm. About 300 EMS-induced mutants affecting behavior and morphology have been characterized and about one hundred genes have been defined. Mutations in 77 of these alter the movement of the animal. Estimates of the induced mutation frequency of both the visible mutants and X chromosome lethals suggests that, just as in Drosophila, the genetic units in C. elegans are large.

The structure of the nervous system of the nematode <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>
JG White, Eileen Southgate, J. Nichol Thomson et al.|Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences|1986
Cited by 5.8k

The structure and connectivity of the nervous system of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has been deduced from reconstructions of electron micrographs of serial sections. The hermaphrodite nervous system has a total complement of 302 neurons, which are arranged in an essentially invariant structure. Neurons with similar morphologies and connectivities have been grouped together into classes; there are 118 such classes. Neurons have simple morphologies with few, if any, branches. Processes from neurons run in defined positions within bundles of parallel processes, synaptic connections being made en passant. Process bundles are arranged longitudinally and circumferentially and are often adjacent to ridges of hypodermis. Neurons are generally highly locally connected, making synaptic connections with many of their neighbours. Muscle cells have arms that run out to process bundles containing motoneuron axons. Here they receive their synaptic input in defined regions along the surface of the bundles, where motoneuron axons reside. Most of the morphologically identifiable synaptic connections in a typical animal are described. These consist of about 5000 chemical synapses, 2000 neuromuscular junctions and 600 gap junctions.

Whole-Genome Shotgun Assembly and Analysis of the Genome of <i>Fugu rubripes</i>
Cited by 1.6k

The compact genome of Fugu rubripes has been sequenced to over 95% coverage, and more than 80% of the assembly is in multigene-sized scaffolds. In this 365-megabase vertebrate genome, repetitive DNA accounts for less than one-sixth of the sequence, and gene loci occupy about one-third of the genome. As with the human genome, gene loci are not evenly distributed, but are clustered into sparse and dense regions. Some "giant" genes were observed that had average coding sequence sizes but were spread over genomic lengths significantly larger than those of their human orthologs. Although three-quarters of predicted human proteins have a strong match to Fugu, approximately a quarter of the human proteins had highly diverged from or had no pufferfish homologs, highlighting the extent of protein evolution in the 450 million years since teleosts and mammals diverged. Conserved linkages between Fugu and human genes indicate the preservation of chromosomal segments from the common vertebrate ancestor, but with considerable scrambling of gene order.

On the Regulation of DNA Replication in Bacteria
F Jacob, Sydney Brenner, François Cuzin|Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology|1963
Cited by 1.4k

The deoxyribonucleotide sequence containing the genetic information of a cell participates in two distinct chemical processes. In the first one, generally called replication, free deoxyribonucleotides are linearly assembled by specific base-pairing to form an identical sequence, or replica of the original structure. The second process, or transcription, allows the genetic material to perform its physiological functions consisting essentially in the production of specific proteins at a suitable rate. As a first step, transcription involves the production of messengers which carry to the protein-forming-centers the information necessary to specify the structure of the polypeptide chains. Messenger synthesis by DNA is a process probably closely similar to that of replication, with the differences that it involves ribo-, instead of deoxyribonucleotides and that, in all likelihood, only one of the DNA strands is used for copying into an RNA transcript.