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Nucleic Acids Research Executive editors R.T.Walker, Birmingham, UK M.J.Gait, Cambridge, UK R.B.Hallick, Tucson, AZ, USA R.J.Roberts, Beverly, MA, USA H.J.Gross, Wulrzburg, Germany S.Linn, Berkeley, CA, USA K.Calame, New York, NY, USA R.I.Gumport, Urbana, IL, USA R.T.Simpson, University Park, PA, USA I.C.Eperon, Leicester, UK Editorial board A.Bairoch, Geneva, Switzerland J.E.Hearst, Berkeley, CA, USA M.G.Parker, London, UK M.Beato, Marburg, Germany C.Helene, Paris, France R.K.Patient, London, UK M.Belfort, Albany, NY, USA A.J.Jeffreys, Leicester, UK M.Paule, Fort Collins, CO, USA M.Busslinger, Vienna, Austria S.-H.Kim, Berkeley, CA, USA A.M.Pyle, New York, NY, USA H.Cedar, Jerusalem, Israel A.R.Krainer, CSHL, NY, USA J.M.Rosen, Houston, TX, USA R.Dalgleish, Leicester, UK R.Krumlauf, London, UK H.Ruterjans, Frankfurt, Germany M.L.DePamphilis, Nutley, NJ, USA A.Lamond, Dundee, UK C.W.Schmid, Davis, CA, USA W.Dynan, Boulder, CO, USA D.S.Latchman, London, UK P.M.Sharp, Nottingham, UK F.Eckstein, Gdttingen, Germany C.J.Leaver, Oxford, UK L.Simpson, Los Angeles, CA, USA J.D.Engel, Evanston, IL, USA D.M.J.Lilley, Dundee, UK S.T.Smale, Los Angeles, CA, USA P.T.Englund, Baltimore, MD, USA J.T.Lis, Ithaca, NY, USA G.Stormo, Boulder, CO, USA D.J.Finnegan, Edinburgh, UK R.Luhrman, Marburg, Germany R.H.Symons, Adelaide, Australia M.Gellert, Bethesda, MD, USA N.C.Martin, Louisville, KY, USA K.Taira, Tsukuba, Japan R.Giege, Strasbourg, France M.McClelland, La Jolla, CA, USA I.Tinoco, Jr, Berkeley, CA, USA L.A.Grivell, Amsterdam, The Netherlands W.R.McClure, Pittsburgh, PA, USA B.Van Ness, Minneapolis, MN, USA W.Gruissem, Berkeley, CA, USA M.Muramatsu, Saitama, Japan A.M.Weiner, New Haven, CT, USA W.Guschlbauer, Gif-sur-Yvette, France E.Ohtsuka, Sapporo, Japan S.C.West, South Mimms, Herts, UK S.E.Halford, Bristol, UK H.Okayama, Tok;yo, Japan J.A.Wise, Cleveland, OH, USA D.Hawley, Eugene, OR, USA M.V.Olson, Seattle, WA, USA G.Zon, Foster City, CA, USA Editorial and Production Joy Walker, UK Editorial Office Sarah Brennan, Production Editor Carol Cook, US Editorial Office Jaqueline Grainger, Production Assistant Robert Blundell, Production Assistant OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Subscriptions Nucleic Acids Research is published semi-monthly (24 issues) with an Annual K Oxford University Press 1995. All rights reserved; no part of this publication Author and Subject Index. Subscriptions are entered on a calendar year basis may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form only and are available as a printed version only or as a printed version plus or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise CD-ROM. Prices include postage by surface mail or, for subscribers in the without either the prior written permission of the Publishers, or a licence USA and Canada by air freight or in India, Japan, Australia and New Zealand, permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by the Copyright Licensing by Air Speeded Post. Airmail rates are available on request. Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London WIP 9HE, or in the USA by the Copyright Clearance Center, 27 Congress Street, Salem, MA 01970. Annual subscription rate (Volume 23, 1995): For those in the US//Canada not registered with CCC, articles can be obtained Journal only: UK and Europe £725, Rest of World $1225. by fax in 48 hours by calling: WISE for MedicineTM 1-800-667-WISE. Journal and CD-ROM: UK and Europe £795, Rest of World $1350. Back volume prices and subscription rates for individuals are also available Back volumes of this journal are available in 16 mm microfilm, 35 mm on request. microfilm and 105 microfiche from University Microfilms International, 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346, USA. Copies of articles Orders. Orders and payments from, or on behalf of, subscribers in the various published are also available from UMI. geographical areas shown below should be sent to the Press office indicated. Nucleic Acids Research (ISSN 0305-1048) is published semi-monthly by The Americas: Oxford University Press Inc., 2001 Evans Road, Cary, NC Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. Annual subscription price is US$1225. 27513, USA. Nucleic Acids Research is distributed by Virgin Mailing & Distribution, 10 Camptown Road, Irvington, NJ 07111-1105, USA. Second Class postage Japan: available from the following agents: paid at Newark, NJ, USA and additional entry points. Kinokuniya Company Ltd, Journal Department, PO Box 55, Chitose, Tokyo, 156 Japan. US POSTMASTER: send address changes to Nucleic Acids Research, c/o Maruzen Company Ltd, Journal Division, PO Box 5050, Tokyo International, Virgin Mailing & Distribution, 10 Camptown Road, Irvington, NJ 07111- 100-31 Japan. 1105, USA. Usaco Corporation, 13-12, Shimbashi 1-chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105 Japan. Rest of the World: Journals Subscriptions Department, Oxford University Press, Walton Street, Oxford OX2 6DP, UK. Tel: (+441865 or 01865) 267907; telex: OXPRESS 837330; Fax: (+441865) 267773. Advertising. To advertise in Nucleic Acids Research contact Oxford University Press (US office) in the Americas or Oxford University Press (UK office) in the Rest of the World (see addresses above). Printed by Information Press Ltd, Oxford, UK on permanent Paper. Cover: The dynamic equilibrium in the control element of the S15 messenger RNA between two hairpins (top left) and a pseudoknot (bottom right). The helix in yellow is present in both structures. The pseudoknot invofves base pairing between the loop in green and the strand in red of the other hairpin. See paper by C. Philippe et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 23, 18-28. Drawing made on a Silicon Graphics EXTREME2 with the program DRAWNA [C. Massive et al., J. Mol. Graph. 12, 201 (1994)]. Authors submitting an article containing a photograph which may be suitable for use on the cover of Nucleic Acids Research are encouraged to contact an executive editor. Packed into the December issue of HMG . ARTICLES Mutation analysis ofthe TSC2 gene in an African-American Identification ofcentromeric antigens in dicentric Robertsonian family. A Kumar, R S Kandt, C Wolpert, A D Roses, M A Pericak- translocations: CENP-C AND CENP-E are necessary components Vance and J R Gilbert P.2295 of functional centromeres B A Sullivan and S Schwartz P 2189 T->A transversion 11 bp from a splice acceptor site in the human Population survey ofthe human FMR1 CGG repeat substructure gene for steroidogenic acute regulatory protein causes congenital suggests biased polarity for the loss ofAGG lipoid adrenal hyperplasia. M-K Tee, D Lin, T Sugawara, J A Holt, interruptions. E E Eichler, H A Hammond, j N Macpherson, Y Guiguen, B Buckingham, J F Strauss III andW L Miller P.2299 P AWard and D L Nelson P 2199 RBM3, a novel human gene in Xpl 1.23 with a putative RNA- Highly conserved 3' UTR and expression pattern of FXR1 points binding domain. J M j Derry, J A Kerns and U Francke P.2307 to a divergent gene regulation of FXR1 and FMR1. J F Coy, Z Sedlacek, D Bachner, H Hameister, S joos, P Lichter, H Delius Breakpoint characterization ofthe ret/PTC oncogene in human and A Poustka P2209 papillary thyroid carcinoma. P A Smanik, T L Furminger, E L Mazzaferri and S M Jhiang P.2313 Oncogenic conversion of a novel orphan nudear receptor by chromosome translocation. Y Labelle,j Zucman, G Stenman, Analysis ofthe OA1 gene reveals mutations in only one-third of L-G Kindblom, J Knight, C Turc-Carel, B Dockhorn- patients with X-linked ocular albinism. M V Schiaffino, M T Bassi, Dworniczak, N Mandahl, C Desmuze, M Peter, A Aurias, 0 L Galli, A Renieri, M Bruttini, F De Nigris, A A B Bergen, S J Delattre and G Thomas P2219 Charles, J RWYates, A Meindl, R A Lewis, R A King and A Ballabio P.2319 REPORTS Analysis ofthe CMTIA-REP repeat: mapping crossover breakpoints Non-disjunction in human sperm: evidence for an effect of in CMTIA and HNPP. H Kiyosawa, M W Lensch and P F Chance increasing paternal age. D K Griffin, M A Abruzzo, E A Millie, P2327 L A Sheean, E Feingold, S L Sherman and T J Hassold P.2227 Characterization ofthe large deletion in the GALC gene found Stability ofthe Huntington disease (CAG)n repeat in a late- in patients with Krabbe disease. P Luzi, M A Rafi and D A Wenger onset form occurring on the Island ofCrete. M Tzagoumissakis, P.2335 C 0 Fesdjian, P Shashidharan and A Plaitakis P2239 A gene (SRPX) encoding a sushi-repeat-containing protein is Lowe Syndrome, a deficiency of a phosphatidyl-inositol 4,5- deleted in patients with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa. A Meindl, bisphophate 5-phosphatase in the Golgi apparatus. S F Suchy, M R S Carvalho, K Herrmann, B Lorenz, H Achatz, B Lorenz, I M Olivos-Glander and R L Nussbaum P2245 E Apfelstedt-Sylla, B Wittwer, M Ross and T Meitinger P2339 Homologous unequal cross-over involving a 2.8 kb direct repeat as a mechanism for the generation ofallelic variants ofthe human Find out more - On the Internet ! cytochrome P450 CYP2D6 gene. V M Steen, A Molven, N K Aarskog and A-K Gulbrandsen P.225 1 The above is just a partial list of the December issue contents. Ifyou have access to the internet, then you can Distinct transcription start sites generate two forms of BRCA1 join for FREE, the Human Molecular Genetics internet mRNA. C-F Xu, M A Brown, J A Chambers, B Griffiths, H mailing list and receive regular information on the entire I Nicolai and E Solomon P2259 contents ofeach issue, delivered direct to your mailbox | Mouse Brcal: sequence and identification of localization, analysis some 2 to 3 weeks before publication.

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