Searched for: person:novicr01
Nomenclature of transposable elements in prokaryotes
Campbell A; Starlinger P; Berg DE; Botstein D; Lederberg EM; Novick RP; Szybalski W
PMID: 384423
ISSN: 0147-619x
CID: 63985
Tn554--a site-specific repressor-controlled transposon in Staphylococcus aureus
Phillips S; Novick RP
PMID: 156306
ISSN: 0028-0836
CID: 63986
Nomenclature of transposable elements in prokaryotes
Campbell A; Berg DE; Botstein D; Lederberg EM; Novick RP; Starlinger P; Szybalski W
Transposable elements are defined as specific DNA segments that can repeatedly insert into a few or many sites in a genome. They are classified as simple IS elements, more complex Tn transposons and self-replicating episomes. Definitions and nomenclature rules for these three classes of prokaryotic transposable elements are specified
PMID: 467979
ISSN: 0378-1119
CID: 63987
ANTIBIOTICS - WONDER DRUGS OR CHICKEN FEED
NOVICK, RP
ISI:A1979HB79500010
ISSN: 0036-861x
CID: 3897952
ONE MANS MEAT - REPLY [Letter]
NOVICK, R
ISI:A1979HR76100004
ISSN: 0036-861x
CID: 3897962
Penicillinase plasmids of Staphylococcus aureus: restriction-deletion maps
Novick RP; Murphy E; Gryczan TJ; Baron E; Edelman I
PMID: 314115
ISSN: 0147-619x
CID: 63990
Genetic translocation in Staphylococcus aureus
Novick RP; Edelman I; Schwesinger MD; Gruss AD; Swanson EC; Pattee PA
A 5.2-kilobase pair transposon, Tn551, has been found in Staphylococcus aureus, a Gram-positive bacterium. Initially detected on plasmid pI258, it undergoes rec-independent transposition to multiple chromosomal and plasmid sites, sometimes causing insertional inactivation. Unlike most other transposons, Tn551 undergoes apparently precise excision as a rule. The initial observation of Tn551 transition involved UV inactivation of the carrier plasmid; this would appear to be a general means of detecting transposable elements
PMCID:382947
PMID: 284355
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 63991
Translocatable elements in Staphylococcus aureus
Novick RP; Edelman I; Latta PD; Swanson EC; Pattee PA
The properties of the first translocatable element in Gram-positive bacteria, a 5.2 kb segment encoding erythromycin resistance in S. aureus, are described. This element translocates from plasmid to multiple chromosomal sites and from chromosome to multiple plasmid sites, sometimes causing insertional inactivation and deletion. The genetic control of translocation and its role in natural plasmid evolution are discussed and preliminary evidence for translocation of penicillin and chloramphenicol resistance is presented. In the latter case, translocation involves in intact plasmid
PMID: 535401
ISSN: 0301-3081
CID: 63988
The molecular basis of the plasmid state
Novick RP
PMID: 535397
ISSN: 0301-3081
CID: 63989
On plasmid incompatibility
Novick RP; Hoppensteadt FC
PMID: 372974
ISSN: 0147-619x
CID: 63992