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Mutant

About: Mutant is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 74520 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3477079 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that this segment of cDNA is additionally the target of somatic mutations in mesenchymal tumors among patients having no apparent predisposition to retinoblastoma and no previous evidence of retinOBlastoma.
Abstract: Retinoblastoma is a childhood tumor that can arise because of mutant alleles acquired as somatic or germinal mutations. The mutant allele can be carried in the germ line. The mutations creating these alleles act by inactivating copies of a recessive oncogene located within band q14 of chromosome 13 and termed the RB1 locus. We have reported isolation of a cDNA fragment that recognizes chromosomal sequences possessing many of the attributes of the retinoblastoma gene associated with the RB1 locus. We now report that this segment is additionally the target of somatic mutations in mesenchymal tumors among patients having no apparent predisposition to retinoblastoma and no previous evidence of retinoblastoma. These tumors provide additional evidence that the cloned sequences are representative of a gene that is a frequent target of inactivation during tumorigenesis. Sequence analysis of this cDNA provides little insight into its normal functional role.

439 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The products of other genes are probably involved in the synthesis of diaminopimelic acid, maintenance of surface adhesins and cell surface membrane transport, showing that many components of the S. aureus cell surface are critical for the survival and replication of this pathogen in blood.
Abstract: Signature-tagged mutagenesis with transposon Tn917 was used to identify genes of Staphylococcus aureus required for virulence in a murine model of bacteraemia. Screening 1248 mutant strains in pools of 96 resulted in the provisional identification of 50 mutants attenuated in virulence. Subsequent individual analysis of many of these mutants confirmed that they are attenuated in virulence. DNA sequence analysis of regions flanking their transposon insertion points revealed that approximately half of them represent genes with unknown function, while most of the remainder are involved in nutrient biosynthesis and cell surface metabolism. Three mutants were found with transposon insertions in different positions in femA, and one mutant had an insertion in femB. Both femA and femB are involved in the formation of cell wall peptidoglycan pentaglycine cross-bridges. A further mutation occurred in a previously unknown gene that shares significant similarity to femB. Mutations were also obtained in recA and lsp (encoding the S. aureus prolipoprotein signal peptidase). On the basis of sequence similarities to proteins of known function, the products of other genes are probably involved in the synthesis of diaminopimelic acid (a component of peptidoglycan), maintenance of surface adhesins and cell surface membrane transport, showing that many components of the S. aureus cell surface are critical for the survival and replication of this pathogen in blood.

439 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
21 Aug 1992-Science
TL;DR: The phenotype of the affected individuals suggests that the mutant Pit-1 protein is competent to initiate other programs of gene activation required for normal proliferation of somatotrope, lactotroPE, and thyrotrope cell types.
Abstract: A point mutation in the POU-specific portion of the human gene that encodes the tissuespecific POU-domain transcription factor, Pit-1, results in hypopituitarism, with deficiencies of growth hormone, prolactin, and thyroid-stimulating hormone. In two unrelated Dutch families, a mutation in Pit-1 that altered an alanine in the first putative α helix of the POU-specific domain to proline was observed. This mutation generated a protein capable of binding to DNA response elments but unable to effectively activate its known target genes, growth hormone and prolactin. The phenotype of the affected individuals suggests that the mutant Pit-1 protein is competent to initiate other programs of gene activation required for normal proliferation of somatotrope, lactotrope, and thyrotrope cell types. Thus, a mutation in the POU-specific domain of Pit-1 has a selective effect on a subset of Pit-1 target genes.

439 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Plants carrying theaxr2 mutation are severe dwarfs and display defects in growth orientation of both the shoot and root suggesting that the mutation affects some aspect of gravitropic growth.
Abstract: We have screened a large population of M2 seeds ofArabidopsis thaliana for plants which are resistant to exogenously applied indole-acetic acid (IAA). One of the resistant lines identified in this screen carries a dominant mutation which we have namedaxr2. Linkage analysis indicates that theaxr2 gene lies on chromosome 3. Plants carrying theaxr2 mutation are severe dwarfs and display defects in growth orientation of both the shoot and root suggesting that the mutation affects some aspect of gravitropic growth. In addition, the roots ofaxr2 plants lack root hairs. Growth inhibition experiments indicate that the roots ofaxr2 plants are resistant to ethylene and abscisic acid as well as auxin.

439 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The leafy cotyledon phenotype has allowed the identification of an important network of regulatory genes with overlapping functions during embryonic maturation in Arabidopsis, which indicates that immature embryos precociously enter a germination pathway after the torpedo stage of development and then acquire characteristics normally restricted to vegetative parts of the plant.
Abstract: We have previously described a homeotic leafy cotyledon (lec) mutant of Arabidopsis that exhibits striking defects in embryonic maturation and produces viviparous embryos with cotyledons that are partially transformed into leaves. In this study, we present further details on the developmental anatomy of mutant embryos, characterize their response to abscisic acid (ABA) in culture, describe other mutants with related phenotypes, and summarize studies with double mutants. Our results indicate that immature embryos precociously enter a germination pathway after the torpedo stage of development and then acquire characteristics normally restricted to vegetative parts of the plant. In contrast to other viviparous mutants of maize (vp1) and Arabidopsis (abi3) that produce ABA-insensitive embryos, immature lec embryos are sensitive to ABA in culture. ABA is therefore necessary but not sufficient for embryonic maturation in Arabidopsis. Three other mutants that produce trichomes on cotyledons following precocious germination in culture are described. One mutant is allelic to lec1, another is a fusca mutant (fus3), and the third defines a new locus (lec2). Mutant embryos differ in morphology, desiccation tolerance, pattern of anthocyanin accumulation, presence of storage materials, size and frequency of trichomes on cotyledons, and timing of precocious germination in culture. The leafy cotyledon phenotype has therefore allowed the identification of an important network of regulatory genes with overlapping functions during embryonic maturation in Arabidopsis.

439 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20237,150
20226,747
20211,630
20201,916
20191,849