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Rebecca Mayes
Researcher at Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
Publications - 4
Citations - 1975
Rebecca Mayes is an academic researcher from Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Gene. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 1895 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The complete genome sequence of Mycobacterium bovis
Thierry Garnier,Karin Eiglmeier,Jean-Christophe Camus,Nadine Medina,Huma Mansoor,Melinda J. Pryor,Stephanie Duthoy,Sophie Grondin,Céline Lacroix,Christel Monsempe,Sylvie Simon,Barbara Harris,Rebecca Atkin,Jon Doggett,Rebecca Mayes,Lisa Keating,Paul R. Wheeler,Julian Parkhill,Bart Barrell,Stewart T. Cole,Stephen V. Gordon,R. Glyn Hewinson +21 more
TL;DR: The genome sequence offers major insight on the evolution, host preference, and pathobiology of M. bovis, implying that differential gene expression may be the key to the host tropisms of human and bovine bacilli.
Journal ArticleDOI
Complete genomes of two clinical Staphylococcus aureus strains: Evidence for the rapid evolution of virulence and drug resistance
Matthew T. G. Holden,Edward J. Feil,Jodi A. Lindsay,Sharon J. Peacock,Nicholas P. J. Day,Mark C. Enright,Timothy J. Foster,Catrin E. Moore,Laurence D. Hurst,Rebecca Atkin,Andrew Barron,Nathalie Bason,Stephen D. Bentley,Carol Chillingworth,Tracey Chillingworth,Carol Churcher,Louise Clark,Craig Corton,Ann Cronin,Jon Doggett,Linda Dowd,Theresa Feltwell,Zahra Hance,Barbara Harris,Heidi Hauser,S. Holroyd,Kay Jagels,Keith D. James,Nicola Lennard,Alexandra Line,Rebecca Mayes,Sharon Moule,Karen Mungall,Douglas Ormond,Michael A. Quail,Ester Rabbinowitsch,Kim Rutherford,Mandy Sanders,Sarah Sharp,Mark Simmonds,K. Stevens,Sally Whitehead,Bart Barrell,Brian G. Spratt,Julian Parkhill +44 more
TL;DR: The crucial role that accessory elements play in the rapid evolution of S. aureus is clearly illustrated by comparing the MSSA476 genome with that of an extremely closely related MRSA community-acquired strain; the differential distribution of large mobile elements carrying virulence and drug-resistance determinants may be responsible for the clinically important phenotypic differences in these strains.
Journal ArticleDOI
The DNA sequence of chromosome I of an African trypanosome: gene content, chromosome organisation, recombination and polymorphism.
Neil Hall,Matthew Berriman,Nicola Lennard,Barbara Harris,Christiane Hertz-Fowler,Emmanuelle N. Bart‐Delabesse,Caroline S. Gerrard,Rebecca Atkin,Andrew Barron,Sharen Bowman,Sarah P. Bray‐Allen,Frédéric Bringaud,Louise Clark,Craig Corton,Ann Cronin,Robert L. Davies,Jonathon Doggett,Audrey Fraser,Eric Grüter,Sarah E. Hall,A. David Harper,M. Kay,Vanessa Leech,Rebecca Mayes,Claire Price,Michael A. Quail,Ester Rabbinowitsch,Christopher Reitter,Kim Rutherford,Jürgen Sasse,Sarah Sharp,Ratna Shownkeen,Annette MacLeod,Sonya Taylor,Alison Tweedie,C. Michael R. Turner,Andrew Tait,Keith Gull,Bart Barrell,Sara E. Melville +39 more
TL;DR: The sequence and analysis of the 1.1 Mb chromosome I, which encodes approximately 400 predicted genes organised into directional clusters, is reported, which indicates an active process of amplification and gene conversion in the African trypanosome.
Supermassive black holes in UCDs formed from the nuclei of disrupted galaxies
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used the hydrodynamic EAGLE simulation to predict the numbers and masses of supermassive black holes in stripped nuclei and compare these to confirmed measurements of black hole in observed UCDs.