CorrectionsBIOCHEMISTRY. For the article ''Interaction of RNA polymerase with forked DNA: Evidence for two kinetically significant intermediates on the pathway to the final complex,'' by Laura Tsujikawa, Oleg V. Tsodikov, and Pieter L. deHaseth, which appeared in number 6, March 19, 2002, of Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (99, 3493-3498; First Published March 12, 2002; 10.1073͞ pnas.062487299), the authors note the following concerning RNA polymerase (RNAP) concentrations. No correction was made for the fraction of RNAP (0.5) that is active in promoter binding. With this correction, the values of K 1 and K app (but not K f ) would increase by about a factor of 2. The relative values would remain essentially unchanged. Also, the legends to Figs. 2, 3, and 5 contain errors pertaining to the symbols used for data obtained with and without heparin challenge, the duration of the challenge, and the concentration of added heparin. The figures and the corrected legends appear below. Fig. 2. Determination of equilibrium affinities by titration of wt Fork with RNAP. The reactions contained 1 nM wt Fork and variable amounts of RNAP as shown and were analyzed by electrophoretic mobility shift immediately (OE; data shown are averages of three independent experiments) or after a challenge with 100 g͞ml heparin for 10 min (F; data shown are averages of four independent experiments). The curves shown reflect the simultaneous errorweighted fits of the data to Eqs. 3 and 4 -7. The parameters are shown in Table 1 (line 1). www.pnas.org͞cgi͞doi͞10.1073͞pnas.013667699 Fig. 3. Kinetics of complex formation. RNAP (65 nM) and wt forked DNA (1 nM) were incubated for various time intervals and then complex formation was determined immediately (Ϫheparin) or after a 2-min challenge with 100 g͞ml heparin (ϩheparin). The Ϫheparin data (s) were fit (error-weighted) with Eq. 8 with a 2 ϭ 0 (kaϪ ϭ 0.10 Ϯ 0.01 s Ϫ1 ) and the ϩheparin data (OE) with both single (k aϩ ϭ 0.036 Ϯ 0.004 s Ϫ1 ; thin line) and double-exponential (ka 1 ϭ 0.044 Ϯ 0.002 s Ϫ1 ; ka 2 ϭ (5 Ϯ 3) ϫ 10 Ϫ4 s Ϫ1 ; thick line) equations. Fig. 5.Comparison of the kinetics for formation and dissociation of competitor-resistant complexes between RNAP and wt Fork. Association data were obtained as described in the text and the legend for Fig. 3 except the concentration of forked DNA was 10 nM. Dissociation kinetics were obtained by challenging with 100 g͞ml heparin a mixture of RNAP and forked DNA that had been incubated for 30 min. The curves represent double-exponential fits of the data to Eq. 10. (A) wt RNAP. The observed association rate constants (s) are shown in the legend for Fig. 3; for the slow phase of the dissociation of the wt Fork-wt RNAP complex (F), kd 2 ϭ (1.3 Ϯ 0.2) ϫ 10 Ϫ4 s Ϫ1 . (B) YYW RNAP. The slow phase of the association reaction (F) has a ka 2 ϭ (1.1 Ϯ 0.3) ϫ 10 Ϫ3 s Ϫ1 ; the slow phase of the dissociation reaction (s), a kd 2 ϭ (6 Ϯ 1) ϫ 10 Ϫ4 s Ϫ1 . Fig. 6. BCL-6 preferentially binds to the wild-type exon 1 in Ly1 cells. Both Ly1 and the control Ly7 cells wer...
Vertebrate photoreceptor cells are the basic sensory apparatus of the retina, capable of converting the energy of absorbed photons into neuronal signals. The proximal portions of mammalian photoreceptor outer segments are synthesized daily by cell bodies, and outer segment tips are shed with a circadian rhythm, resulting in a complete turnover of outer segments about every 9 days. The shed outer segments are phagocytosed by adjacent retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells, and metabolites are recycled to photoreceptors. The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rat is a widely studied, classic model of recessively inherited retinal degeneration in which the RPE fails to phagocytose shed outer segments, and photoreceptor cells subsequently die. We have used a positional cloning approach to study the rdy (retinal dystrophy) locus of the RCS rat. Within a 0.3 cM genetic inclusion interval, we have discovered a small deletion of RCS DNA that disrupts the gene encoding the receptor tyrosine kinase Mertk. The deletion includes the splice acceptor site upstream of the second coding exon of Mertk and results in a shortened transcript that lacks this exon. The aberrant transcript joins the first and third coding exons, leading to a frameshift and a translation termination signal 20 codons after the AUG. The concordance of these and other data indicate that Mertk is probably the gene for rdy. Our results provide genetic evidence for an essential role of a receptor tyrosine kinase in a specialized form of phagocytosis and suggest a molecular model for ingestion of outer segments by RPE cells.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a prototypical autoimmune disease characterized by production of autoantibodies and complex genetic inheritance. In a genome-wide scan using 85,042 SNPs, we identified an association between SLE and a nonsynonymous substitution (rs10516487, R61H) in the B-cell scaffold protein with ankyrin repeats gene, BANK1. We replicated the association in four independent case-control sets (combined P = 3.7 x 10(-10); OR = 1.38). We analyzed BANK1 cDNA and found two isoforms, one full-length and the other alternatively spliced and lacking exon 2 (Delta2), encoding a protein without a putative IP3R-binding domain. The transcripts were differentially expressed depending on a branch point-site SNP, rs17266594, in strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) with rs10516487. A third associated variant was found in the ankyrin domain (rs3733197, A383T). Our findings implicate BANK1 as a susceptibility gene for SLE, with variants affecting regulatory sites and key functional domains. The disease-associated variants could contribute to sustained B cell-receptor signaling and B-cell hyperactivity characteristic of this disease.
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