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To: SCIENCE EDITORS Contact: Julie O'Connor of Wayne State University, +1-313-577- 8845, ag2712@wayne.edu
... that contain coding sequences for DNA polymerase . . . from any bacterial source, [but] the narrow ...
...expression of DNA polymerase enzyme. The patent specification. disclosed the co...
The inventions listed below are owned by an agency of the U.S. Government and are available for licensing in the U.S. in accordance with 35 U.S.C. 207 to achieve expeditious commercialization of results of federally-funded research and development. Foreign patent applications are filed on selected inventions to extend market coverage for companies and may also be available for licensing.
... Antibodies Targeting Human DNA Polymerase beta, a DNA Repair Enzyme. Description of Tech...
TUCSON, Ariz., Sept. 2 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Why is it so hard to isolate and purify human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)? Why has no one been able to see, by electron microscopy, a single HIV particle in the blood of AIDS patients, even those who have a "high viral load"? Why does HIV seem to mutate with startling rapidity? AIDS researchers have not been able to come up with answers to these questions. HERVs--human endogenous retroviruses--might provide explanations that have been overlooked for 20 years, writes Professor Etienne de Harven, M.D., in the fall 2010 issue of the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons. HERVs are present in all of us, and fragments of their DNA may be confused with HIV in the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests used to estimate viral load.
... to deamination, and interfere with polymerases. Normally, human cells have multiple DNA repair pa...
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