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Nancy Kleckner

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  223
Citations -  37095

Nancy Kleckner is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tn10 & Meiosis. The author has an hindex of 92, co-authored 217 publications receiving 34993 citations. Previous affiliations of Nancy Kleckner include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & University of California, Los Angeles.

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Tn 10 transposition in vivo: temporal separation of cleavages at the two transposon ends and roles of terminal basepairs subsequent to interaction of ends.

TL;DR: Results presented here demonstrate that an interaction between the two transposon ends is required for double strand cleavage at either end, and that mutations at the three terminal basepairs of Tn10 confer defects subsequent to interaction of ends, in confirmation of inferences from genetic analysis.
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Physical Analysis of Tn10- and IS10-Promoted Transpositions and Rearrangements

TL;DR: The data suggest that intramolecular Tn10-promoted rearrangements preferentially use nearby target sites, while the target sites for IS10 transposition events are scattered randomly around the chromosome.
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A new type of fusion analysis applicable to many organisms: protein fusions to the URA3 gene of yeast.

TL;DR: URA3 fusions offer several advantages over other systems for gene fusion analysis: the URA3 specified protein is small and cytosolic; genetic selections exist to identify mutants with either increased or decreased URA2 function in both yeast and bacteria; and a sensitive OMP decarboxylase enzyme assay is available.
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Recombination-independent recognition of DNA homology for repeat-induced point mutation

TL;DR: A model, in which sequence homology is detected by direct interactions between slightly-extended double-stranded DNAs, is proposed and it is important to determine if the uncovered principles also apply to other processes that involve recombination-independent interactions between homologous chromosomal loci in vivo as well as to protein-free DNA/DNA interactions that were recently observed under biologically relevant conditions in vitro.