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Co-targeting among microRNAs is widespread and enriched in the brain
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2019)
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play roles in diverse developmental processes and cellular differentiation. Distinct miRNAs have hundreds to thousands of conserved binding sites in mRNAs, but typically exert only modest repression on ...
Development of natural and engineered bacteriophages as antimicrobials
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2018)
One of the major public health concerns of the modern day is the emergence and spread of extensively antibiotic-resistant pathogens. We have already seen the arrival of infections caused by bacteria resistant to all available ...
Molecular, cellular, and circuit analysis of C. elegans spitting behavior
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2020)
To identify the neural and molecular substrates of animal behavior and understand the principles by which they function is a major goal in neurobiology. One simple system for such behavioral studies is the pharynx of the ...
Effects of the mobile genetic element ICEBs1 on bacterial host fitness
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2020)
Mobile genetic elements drive bacterial evolution by mediating horizontal gene transfer and by carrying cargo genes that confer important traits to host cells. Traits provided by mobile genetic elements include antibiotic ...
Aneuploidy causes proteotoxic stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2014)
Gains or losses of entire chromosomes lead to aneuploidy, a condition tolerated poorly in all eukaryotes analyzed to date. How aneuploidy affects organismal and cellular physiology is only beginning to be understood. ...
Investigation of CD4+ T cell heterogeneity and function in a genetic mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2018)
The clinical success of immune checkpoint blockade in the treatment of various cancers provides proof-of-concept that disrupting tumor immune tolerance is an effective therapeutic strategy. Nevertheless, only a subset of ...
Investigation of replication fork progression and re-replication fork instability at the Drosophila follicle cell amplicons
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2016)
The Drosophila follicle cell amplicons are a well-established model system of origin firing, and have been extensively used to investigate the cis and trans-acting elements that govern origin regulation in metazoan ...
A chromatin-modifying protein is a context-dependent modulator of cell survival in hematopoietic malignancies
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2014)
Proteins that modify chromatin architecture are important drivers of leukemia. Many genetic lesions in hematopoietic malignancies lead to altered function of one or more chromatin-modifying proteins, often resulting in ...
Studies of programmed cell death in the nematode caenorhabditis elegans
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2016)
Programmed cell death is an evolutionarily conserved process that plays critical roles in normal animal development and has been extensively studied in C. elegans. During programmed cell death, caspases are activated in ...
Pathological features of mitochondrial respiratory chain dysfunction
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2016)
Mitochondria are essential organelles that carry out a multitude of important metabolic processes in mammalian organisms. These processes include ATP generation by the respiratory chain, aspartate synthesis by matrix ...