David Aaron Shub

Affiliations: 
Biology State University of New York, Albany, Albany, NY, United States 
Area:
moleculat biology of bacteria and bacteriophage; gene regulation; RNA splicing; horizontal gene transfer
Website:
https://www.albany.edu/~shub/
Google:
"David Aaron Shub" OR "David A Shub"
Bio:

https://www.cell.com/current-biology/pdf/S0960-9822(03)00809-1.pdf
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/David-Shub-2
https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25106380

BETA: Related publications

Publications

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Salman V, Amann R, Shub DA, et al. (2012) Multiple self-splicing introns in the 16S rRNA genes of giant sulfur bacteria. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109: 4203-8
Salman V, Amann R, Shub DA, et al. (2012) Multiple self-splicing introns in the 16S rRNA genes of giant sulfur bacteria. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109: 4203-8
Bonocora RP, Zeng Q, Abel EV, et al. (2011) A homing endonuclease and the 50-nt ribosomal bypass sequence of phage T4 constitute a mobile DNA cassette. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 108: 16351-6
Bonocora RP, Zeng Q, Abel EV, et al. (2011) A homing endonuclease and the 50-nt ribosomal bypass sequence of phage T4 constitute a mobile DNA cassette. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 108: 16351-6
Zeng Q, Bonocora RP, Shub DA. (2009) A free-standing homing endonuclease targets an intron insertion site in the psbA gene of cyanophages. Current Biology : Cb. 19: 218-22
Bonocora RP, Shub DA. (2009) A likely pathway for formation of mobile group I introns. Current Biology : Cb. 19: 223-8
Bonocora RP, Shub DA. (2009) A likely pathway for formation of mobile group I introns. Current Biology : Cb. 19: 223-8
Zhao L, Bonocora RP, Shub DA, et al. (2007) The restriction fold turns to the dark side: a bacterial homing endonuclease with a PD-(D/E)-XK motif. The Embo Journal. 26: 2432-42
Landthaler M, Shen BW, Stoddard BL, et al. (2006) I-BasI and I-HmuI: two phage intron-encoded endonucleases with homologous DNA recognition sequences but distinct DNA specificities. Journal of Molecular Biology. 358: 1137-51
Bonocora RP, Shub DA. (2004) A self-splicing group I intron in DNA polymerase genes of T7-like bacteriophages. Journal of Bacteriology. 186: 8153-5
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