Faculty Opinions recommendation of DNA-PKcs has KU-dependent function in rRNA processing and haematopoiesis.

Author(s):  
Woan-Yuh Tarn
Nature ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 579 (7798) ◽  
pp. 291-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengping Shao ◽  
Ryan A. Flynn ◽  
Jennifer L. Crowe ◽  
Yimeng Zhu ◽  
Jialiang Liang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
K. Brasch ◽  
J. Williams ◽  
D. Gallo ◽  
T. Lee ◽  
R. L. Ochs

Though first described in 1903 by Ramon-y-Cajal as silver-staining “accessory bodies” to nucleoli, nuclear bodies were subsequently rediscovered by electron microscopy about 30 years ago. Nuclear bodies are ubiquitous, but seem most abundant in hyperactive and malignant cells. The best studied type of nuclear body is the coiled body (CB), so termed due to characteristic morphology and content of a unique protein, p80-coilin (Fig.1). While no specific functions have as yet been assigned to CBs, they contain spliceosome snRNAs and proteins, and also the nucleolar protein fibrillarin. In addition, there is mounting evidence that CBs arise from or are generated near the nucleolus and then migrate into the nucleoplasm. This suggests that as yet undefined links may exist, between nucleolar pre-rRNA processing events and the spliceosome-associated Sm proteins in CBs.We are examining CB and nucleolar changes in three diverse model systems: (1) estrogen stimulated chick liver, (2) normal and neoplastic cells, and (3) polyploid mouse liver.


Author(s):  
Kirk Ludwig

Chapter 9 argues first that the assignment of a status function to an object or type of object for use on repeated occasions constitutes a convention. The relevant notion of convention is that of collective acceptance by a group of a solution to a coordination problem. This is contrasted with David Lewis’s account of convention. Next, it provides an analysis of collective acceptance as a matter of members of a group having either appropriately interlocking we-intentions directed at particular objects or appropriately interlocking conditional we-intentions directed at objects or types of objects. Finally, it explains, in light of this, in what sense a status function is an intention dependent function, that is, a function that cannot be performed by an object having it unintentionally.


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