UK Home Academics Athletics Medical Center Research Site Index Search UK
Research Team in the Lab College of Medicine Department Logo  
click here to view a link
Peterson Publications

Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics

Martha Peterson, Ph.D.

Selected Publications:

Peterson, M.L. Regulated immunoglobulin RNA processing does not require specific cis-acting sequences: Non-Ig genes can be alternatively processed in B cells and plasma cells. Mol. Cell. Biol. 14:7891-7898, 1994. [Abstract]

Takagaki, Y., R.L. Seipelt, M.L. Peterson, and J.L. Manley. The polyadenylation factor CstF-64 regulates alternative processing of IgM heavy chain pre-mRNA during B cell differentiation. Cell, 87:941-952, 1996. [Abstract]

Davidson, J.N. and M.L. Peterson. Origin of genes encoding multienzymatic proteins in eukaryotes. Trends in Genetics, 13:281-285, 1997.

Seipelt, R.L., B.T. Spear, E.C. Snow, and M.L. Peterson. A non-Ig transgene and the endogenous Ig µ gene are coordinately regulated by alternative RNA processing during B cell maturation. Mol. Cell. Biol. 18:1042-1048, 1998. [Abstract]

Bruce, S.R., C.S. Kaetzel, and M.L. Peterson. Cryptic intron activation within the large exon of the mouse polymeric immunoglobulin receptor gene: Cryptic splice sites correspond to protein domain boundaries. Nucleic Acids Res. 27:3446-3454, 1999. [Abstract]

Bruce, S.R. and M.L. Peterson. Multiple features contribute to the efficient constitutive splicing of an unusually large exon. Nucleic Acids Res. 29:2292-2302, 2001. [Abstract]

Peterson, M.L., S. Bertolino, and F. Davis. An RNA polymerase pause site associated with the immunoglobulin µs polyA site. Mol. Cell. Biol. 22:5606-5615, 2002. [Abstract]

Bruce, S.R., R.C.W. Dingle and M.L. Peterson (2003) B cell and plasma cell splicing differences: a potential role in regulated immunoglobulin RNA processing. RNA 9, 1264-1273. [Abstract]

Perincheri, S. , R.W.C. Dingle, M.L. Peterson, and Brett T. Spear (2005) Hereditary persistence of α-fetoprotein and H19 expression in liver of BALB/cJ mice is due to a retrovirus insertion in the Zhx2 gene. PNAS, 102, 396-401 [Abstract]



.

Search COM
 
Comments to Jeff Lynn, Last Modified: Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Copyright © 2004, University of Kentucky Chandler Medical Center
Terms, Conditions & Privacy Statement
An Equal Opportunity University