S
Suzanne Sandmeyer
Researcher at University of California, Irvine
Publications - 83
Citations - 5287
Suzanne Sandmeyer is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Retrotransposon & Gene. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 81 publications receiving 5136 citations. Previous affiliations of Suzanne Sandmeyer include University of California & University of California, San Diego.
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BookDOI
Mobile DNA III
Nancy L. Craig,Michael Chandler,Martin Gellert,Alan M. Lambowitz,Phoebe A. Rice,Suzanne Sandmeyer +5 more
TL;DR: This new edition of the bestselling series on movable genetic elements highlights the many exciting advances in the field over the last decade, including conservative site-specific recombination, programmed rearrangements, DNA-only transposons, and LTR, and non-LTR retrotransposons.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cdc53/cullin and the essential Hrt1 RING-H2 subunit of SCF define a ubiquitin ligase module that activates the E2 enzyme Cdc34.
Jae Hong Seol,R. M. Renny Feldman,Wolfgang Zachariae,Andrej Shevchenko,Craig C. Correll,Svetlana Lyapina,Y. Chi,Marta Galova,Jonathan A. Claypool,Suzanne Sandmeyer,Kim Nasmyth,Raymond J. Deshaies +11 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that Cdc53/Hrt1 comprise a highly conserved module that serves as the functional core of a broad variety of heteromeric ubiquitin ligases.
Journal ArticleDOI
Requirement of RNA polymerase III transcription factors for in vitro position-specific integration of a retroviruslike element.
TL;DR: In vitro integration of a retroelement can be targeted by cellular proteins and it is demonstrated that TFIIIB and TFIIIC were sufficient for position-specific Ty3 integration, but not for transcription.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ty3 integrates within the region of RNA polymerase III transcription initiation.
TL;DR: Over 190 independent insertions into target plasmids of the retrovirus-like element Ty3 were recovered and mapped, and this is the first report directly linking a discrete genomic function with preferential insertion of a retrotransposon.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ty3, a yeast retrotransposon associated with tRNA genes, has homology to animal retroviruses.
TL;DR: The inferred order of functional domains within TYB3--protease, reverse transcriptase, and endonuclease--resembles the order in Drosophila element 17.6 and in animal retroviruses but is different from that found in yeast elements Ty1 and Ty2.