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RNA

About: RNA is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 111695 publications have been published within this topic receiving 5475262 citations. The topic is also known as: ribonucleic acid.


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Patent
01 Feb 1995
TL;DR: In this article, purine-based compounds for inclusion into oligonucleotides were proposed, which are especially useful as "antisense" agents, agents that are capable of specific hybridization with a nucleotide sequence of an RNA.
Abstract: This invention is directed to novel purine-based compounds for inclusion into oligonucleotides. The compounds of the invention, when incorporated into oligonucleotides are especially useful as 'antisense' agents -- agents that are capable of specific hybridization with a nucleotide sequence of an RNA. The compounds of the invention may also be used for cross-linking oligonucleotides. Oligonucleotides are used for a variety of therapeutic and diagnostic purposes, such as treating deseases, regulating gene expression in experimental systems, assaying for RNA and for RNA products through the employment of antisense interactions with such RNA, diagnosing diseases, modulating the production of proteins, and cleaving RNA in site specific fashions. The compounds of the invention include novel heterocyclic bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides. When incorporated into oligonucleotides, the compounds of the invention can be useful for modulating the activity of RNA.

603 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 1991-Virology
TL;DR: The relative sensitivity of a virus to the inhibitory action of IFN is governed by the qualitative nature and quantitative amount of the individual IFN-regulated cell proteins that may collectively contribute to the inhibition of virus replication.

603 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
22 Apr 2011-Science
TL;DR: A method of fluctuation analysis of fluorescently labeled RNA is described to measure dynamics of nascent RNA—including initiation, elongation, and termination—at an active yeast locus and finds no transcriptional memory between initiation events, and elongation speed can vary by threefold throughout the cell cycle.
Abstract: Cellular messenger RNA levels are achieved by the combinatorial complexity of factors controlling transcription, yet the small number of molecules involved in these pathways fluctuates stochastically It has not yet been experimentally possible to observe the activity of single polymerases on an endogenous gene to elucidate how these events occur in vivo Here, we describe a method of fluctuation analysis of fluorescently labeled RNA to measure dynamics of nascent RNA—including initiation, elongation, and termination—at an active yeast locus We find no transcriptional memory between initiation events, and elongation speed can vary by threefold throughout the cell cycle By measuring the abundance and intranuclear mobility of an upstream transcription factor, we observe that the gene firing rate is directly determined by trans-activating factor search times

602 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present review summarizes key progress made in characterizing the small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) of eukaryotic cells.
Abstract: The present review summarizes key progress made in characterizing the small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) of eukaryotic cells. Recent studies have shown snoRNA populations to be substantially more complex than anticipated initially. Many newly discovered snoRNAs are synthesized by an intron-processing pathway, which provides a potential mechanism for coordinating nuclear RNA synthesis. Several snoRNAs and snoRNP proteins are known to be needed for processing of ribosomal RNA, but precise functions remain to be defined. In principle, snoRNAs could have several roles in ribosome synthesis including: folding of pre-rRNA, formation of rRNP substrates, catalyzing RNA cleavages, base modification, assembly of pre-ribosomal subunits, and export of product rRNP particles.

601 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most exhaustive searches have taken place in E. coli, resulting in identification of more than 50 small RNAs, or 1%-2% of the number of protein-coding genes.
Abstract: Small noncoding RNAs have been found in all organisms, primarily as regulators of translation and message stability. The most exhaustive searches have taken place in E. coli, resulting in identification of more than 50 small RNAs, or 1%-2% of the number of protein-coding genes. One large class of these small RNAs uses the RNA chaperone Hfq; members of this class act by pairing to target messenger RNAs. Among the members of this class are DsrA and RprA, which positively regulate rpoS translation, OxyS, which negatively regulates rpoS translation and fhlA translation, RyhB, which reapportions iron use in the cell by downregulating translation of many genes that encode Fe-containing proteins, and Spot 42, which changes the polarity of translation in the gal operon. The promoters of these small RNAs are tightly regulated, frequently as part of well-understood regulons. Lessons learned from the study of small RNAs in E. coli can be applied to finding these important regulators in other organisms.

601 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20233,706
20227,117
20214,436
20204,465
20193,923