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Craig H. Duncan

Researcher at Yale University

Publications -  5
Citations -  797

Craig H. Duncan is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Base pair & Interspersed repeat. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 796 citations.

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Ubiquitous, interspersed repeated sequences in mammalian genomes

TL;DR: It is demonstrated 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.
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RNA polymerase III transcriptional units are interspersed among human non-alpha-globin genes

TL;DR: Cloned human DNA fragments containing globin genes are transcribed in vitro to form discrete RNA species to study the role of globin in EMT and its role in wound healing.
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Transcriptional analysis of interspersed repetitive polymerase III transcription units in human DNA

TL;DR: The template for RNA polymerase III in vitro transcription found on the human DNA clone pJP53 was shown to enclose a member of the Alu famiy of interspersed repetitive DNA sequences to be mapped onto its template in greater detail by comparison of the template DNA sequence to the base composition of the Tl ribonuclease digestion products of the in vitro transcript.
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Structural analysis of templates and RNA polymerase III transcripts of Alu family sequences interspersed among the human β-like globin genes

TL;DR: The data indicate the repetitive DNA sequences, members of the Alu family of interpersed 300 bp reiterated DNA, are imbedded in both templates and the RNAs transcribed from them are composed of an entire AlU family sequence.
Journal Article

Structural analysis of interspersed repetitive polymerase III transcription units in human DNA.

TL;DR: The nucleotide sequences of two cloned fragments of human DNA which function as templates for RNA polymerase III in vitro confirm their identities as members of the Alu family of human interspersed repetitive DNA sequences, and evidence indicates that the human Alufamily resembles a partial duplication of the murine B1 sequence.