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Patrick Sung

Researcher at University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

Publications -  304
Citations -  29156

Patrick Sung is an academic researcher from University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. The author has contributed to research in topics: DNA repair & Homologous recombination. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 297 publications receiving 26752 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick Sung include University of Texas at Austin & Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

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Mechanism of eukaryotic homologous recombination.

TL;DR: HR accessory factors that facilitate other stages of the Rad51- and Dmc1-catalyzed homologous DNA pairing and strand exchange reaction have also been identified.
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Catalysis of ATP-dependent homologous DNA pairing and strand exchange by yeast RAD51 protein

TL;DR: The RAD51 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is required for genetic recombination and DNA double-strand break repair and it is demonstrated that RAD51 protein pairs circular viral single-stranded DNA from phi X 174 or M13 with its respective homologous linear double-Stranded form, indicating that RAD 51 can catalyze strand exchange.
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Mechanism of homologous recombination: mediators and helicases take on regulatory functions

TL;DR: This work has shown that mutations in the tumour-suppressor protein BRCA2, which has a mediator function in HR, lead to cancer formation and DNA helicases, such as Bloom's syndrome protein, regulate HR at several levels, in attenuating unwanted HR events and in determining the outcome of HR.
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DNA helicase Srs2 disrupts the Rad51 presynaptic filament

TL;DR: The role of SRS2 in recombination modulation is clarified by purifying its encoded product and examining its interactions with the Rad51 recombinase, and it is shown that Srs2 acts by dislodging Rad51 from ssDNA.
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Function of Yeast Rad52 Protein as a Mediator between Replication Protein A and the Rad51 Recombinase

TL;DR: Rad52 functions as a co-factor for the Rad51 recombinase, acting specifically to overcome the apparent competition by RPA for binding to single-stranded DNA.