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Peggy Clark

South Australia Pathology

Publishes on Protease and Inhibitor Mechanisms, Blood Coagulation and Thrombosis Mechanisms, Iron Metabolism and Disorders. 45 papers and 1.6k citations.

45Publications
1.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A genetic study of von Recklinghausen neurofibromatosis in south east Wales. I. Prevalence, fitness, mutation rate, and effect of parental transmission on severity.
Susan Huson, D. A. S. Compston, Peggy Clark et al.|Journal of Medical Genetics|1989
Cited by 544Open Access

A population based study of von Recklinghausen neurofibromatosis in south east Wales (population 668,100) identified 69 families with 135 affected members (prevalence 1/4950 of the population). In these families penetrance of the NF-1 gene was 100% by the age of five years. The genetic fitness of NF-1 sufferers was found to be reduced to 0.47, the effect being more marked in males than females (f = 0.31 and 0.60, respectively). Forty-one of 135 cases were judged to represent new disease mutations and the mutation rate was estimated to lie between 3.1 x 10(-5) and 10.4 x 10(-5). A parental age effect for new mutations was not found, nor was a maternal effect on disease severity.

Copper metallothionein of yeast, structure of the gene, and regulation of expression.
Tauseef R. Butt, E. J. Sternberg, Jessica A. Gorman et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1984
Cited by 285Open Access

Addition of copper to yeast cells leads to the induction of a low molecular weight, cysteine-rich protein that binds copper. This protein, termed copper chelatin or thionein, is related to the metallothionein family of proteins that are induced in response to cadmium and zinc in vertebrate cells. We have determined the structure of the yeast copper-binding protein by DNA sequence analysis of the gene. Although the 6573-dalton yeast protein is substantially divergent from vertebrate metallothioneins, the arrangement of 12 cysteine residues, which is a hallmark of metal-binding proteins, is partially conserved. We analyzed the regulatory DNA sequence of the gene by fusing it with the Escherichia coli galactokinase gene and assaying the levels of enzyme activity in yeast in response to copper. The transcriptional activation has a specific requirement for copper. Zinc, cadmium, and gold were unable to regulate the galactokinase activity. The yeast copper metallothionein regulatory sequences represent a previously unreported class of yeast promoter that is regulated by copper.

A twin study of skin reflectance
Peggy Clark, Alan E. Stark, R. J. Walsh et al.|Annals of Human Biology|1981
Cited by 56

Skin colour has been measured by reflectance spectrophotometry on 134 pairs of twins at three sites, forehead, forearm and upper arm, each at three wavelengths, 425, 545 and 685 nm. Tanning is measured most reliably at 685 nm and at this wavelength the heritability is high at the least exposed upper arm site, intermediate on the forearm, while on the forehead variation is entirely environmentally determined. The same gradient is observed, through less strikingly at 545 nm, but at 425 nm, where haemoglobin is reflecting most of the light, the degree of genetic determination is the same at all sites.