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1. Non-canonical actions of mismatch repair.

2. Replicative DNA polymerase δ but not ε proofreads errors in Cis and in Trans.

3. Oxidative damage and mutagenesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: genetic studies of pathways affecting replication fidelity of 8-oxoguanine.

4. Different roles of eukaryotic MutS and MutL complexes in repair of small insertion and deletion loops in yeast.

5. In vivo bypass of 8-oxodG.

7. Mismatch repair-dependent mutagenesis in nondividing cells.

8. Transformation with oligonucleotides creating clustered changes in the yeast genome.

9. An end for mismatch repair.

10. Oligonucleotide transformation of yeast reveals mismatch repair complexes to be differentially active on DNA replication strands.

11. The effects of mismatch repair and RAD1 genes on interchromosomal crossover recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

12. A new reversion assay for measuring all possible base pair substitutions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

13. Mutagenesis assays in yeast.

14. Regulation of mitotic homeologous recombination in yeast. Functions of mismatch repair and nucleotide excision repair genes.

15. The role of mismatch repair in the prevention of base pair mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

16. Mutation in the mismatch repair gene Msh6 causes cancer susceptibility.

17. Mismatch repair mutants in yeast are not defective in transcription-coupled DNA repair of UV-induced DNA damage.

18. Mitotic crossovers between diverged sequences are regulated by mismatch repair proteins in Saccaromyces cerevisiae.

19. Selectable cassettes for simplified construction of yeast gene disruption vectors.

20. Mutations in the MSH3 gene preferentially lead to deletions within tracts of simple repetitive DNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

21. Mismatch correction acts as a barrier to homeologous recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

22. Characterization of the mouse Rep-3 gene: sequence similarities to bacterial and yeast mismatch-repair proteins.

23. The yeast gene MSH3 defines a new class of eukaryotic MutS homologues.

24. Exon mapping by PCR.

25. Analysis of the mouse Dhfr/Rep-3 major promoter region by using linker-scanning and internal deletion mutations and DNase I footprinting.

26. Transcription of the mouse dihydrofolate reductase gene proceeds unabated through seven polyadenylation sites and terminates near a region of repeated DNA.

27. Analysis of the mouse dhfr promoter region: existence of a divergently transcribed gene.

28. Analysis of gene expression using episomal mouse dihydrofolate reductase minigenes.

29. Structure of amplified normal and variant dihydrofolate reductase genes in mouse sarcoma S180 cells.

30. The specificity of in vitro chromatin transcription.

31. Dihydrofolate reductase gene expression in cultured mouse cells is regulated by transcript stabilization in the nucleus.

32. Gene engineering by selectable intraplasmid recombination: construction of novel dihydrofolate reductase minigenes.

33. Expression and amplification of engineered mouse dihydrofolate reductase minigenes.

34. Dual bidirectional promoters at the mouse dhfr locus: cloning and characterization of two mRNA classes of the divergently transcribed Rep-1 gene.

36. Restriction map of the region surrounding the EcoRI site in the pCR1 plasmid and analysis of an inserted ovalbumin gene.

37. In vitro transcription of chromatin in the presence of a mercurated nucleotide.

38. Construction of linker-scanning mutations using a kanamycin-resistance cassette with multiple symmetric restriction sites.

39. Gene manipulation by homologous recombination in Escherichia coli.

40. Plasmids supplying the Q-qut-controlled gam function permit growth of lambda red- gam- (Fec-) bacteriophages on recA- hosts.

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