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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Guidebooks, 1952"

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Newman, Alana N. "Laura Gawlinski. The Athenian Agora Museum Guide". Journal of Greek Archaeology 2 (1 de janeiro de 2017): 476–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v2i.630.

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Between 1953 and 1956 the Hellenistic Stoa of Attalos was converted into a museum. It currently houses the finds from excavations carried out by the American School of Classical Studies in the Athenian agora since 1931. Laura Gawlinski’s The Athenian Agora Museum Guide is a well-written guidebook to this unique museum. The aim of this book is to provide the reader with supplementary historical, archaeological, and cultural information not only about the artefacts displayed in the museum, but also about the building itself. Indeed, Gawlinski makes a commendable effort to emphasise the distinct vantage point, that the visitor has to experience finds from the agora in a restored building from the ancient site.
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Richardson, R. C. "Cultural Mapping in 1951: The Festival of Britain Regional Guidebooks". Literature & History 24, n.º 2 (novembro de 2015): 53–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/lh.24.2.4.

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Kowalenko, Olena. "Radziecki przewodnik turystyczny po Moskwie: retrospektywa". Z Badań nad Książką i Księgozbiorami Historycznymi 11 (29 de dezembro de 2017): 377–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.33077/uw.25448730.zbkh.2017.44.

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The article gives a brief description of Moscow guide books printed between 1922 and 1991. The retrospective of Soviet texts is preceded by tracing the origins of Moscow travel guides, which goes back to travel notes from the 16th and 17th centuries. The paper presents 34 Soviet itineraries by providing their composition and content summary. Also, it demonstrates and explains the referential and syncretic patterns of Soviet guidebooks, and the shift made at the turn of the NEP era and the 1930s. Tourism evolution, city planning and state censorship are discussed among the factors that influence travel itineraries. The diachronic approach allows to note continuity and transformation elements of Soviet travel guides to Moscow.
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Nannini, Sofia. "From Reception to Invention: The Arrival of Concrete to Iceland and the Rhetoric of Guðmundur Hannesson". Arts 7, n.º 4 (22 de outubro de 2018): 68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/arts7040068.

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The quick modernisation of Iceland, which took place rapidly from the first decades of the 20th century onwards, brought not only fishing trawlers and cars into the country. Among all the techniques of modernity, steinsteypa [concrete] was to become the key material that changed the built landscape of the island and was soon adopted by the first Icelandic architects, such as Rögnvaldur Ólafsson (1874–1914) and Guðjón Samúelsson (1887–1950). Interestingly, the main supporter of this material was Guðmundur Hannesson (1866–1946), a medical doctor and town planning enthusiast who wrote several articles and even a guidebook published in 1921, Steinsteypa. Leiðarvísir fyrir alþýðu og viðvaninga [Concrete: A Guidebook for Common People and Beginners]. In a country that was seeking an architectural self-representation, he understood the technical and formal possibilities that concrete could offer. By analysing his articles and publications, this essay aims to discuss the rhetoric of Guðmundur Hannesson and his role in writing an Icelandic chapter of the history of concrete, from its early stage of unmodern trial-and-error to the definition of a modern Icelandic architecture.
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Wagner, Lauren, e Claudio Minca. "Topographies of the Kasbah Route: Hardening of a heritage trail". Tourist Studies 17, n.º 2 (31 de julho de 2016): 117–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468797615618307.

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In 1932, the Tourism Syndicate of the French Protectorate government in Morocco published a guidebook for French tourists to follow the ‘ Route des Kasbas’ through southern Morocco. The trajectory described is still in many ways reproduced by contemporary guiding materials, delineating specific routes where this ‘heritage’ might be found in Morocco and what sorts of mobilities are necessary to seek it. Using these guiding resources from ‘the field’, along with our own ethnographic experiences as travelling researchers, we trace how colonial cartographical rationalities structured in this region along its ‘road’, through promotion by the French Protectorate government as a mobile site for tourism, and how that infrastructural and economic sedimentation persists in contemporary mobilities through it – including our own mobilities as tourism researchers. We question when and how it might be possible to escape this cartographic specificity for other spatialities of this road.
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Kopiński, Krzysztof. "Selected Reviews of State Archive Resource Guides in Polish Journals Issued in the Years 1959–2017". Res Historica 55 (20 de julho de 2023): 617–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/rh.2023.55.617-638.

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This article focuses on selected reviews of state archive resource guides in Polish journals. The query was based on the following journals: „Archeion”, „Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne”, „Archiwista Polski” i „Archiwa – Kancelarie – Zbiory”. In addition, the author uses singular reviews of archive resource guides found in „Zapiski Historyczne”, „Przegląd Zachodnio-Pomorski”, „Roczniki Dziejów Społecznych i Gospodarczych”, „Kwartalnik Historii Kultury Materialnej” and „Rocznik Biblioteki Narodowej”. A total number of 18 reviews of 11 archive resource guides, published in the years 1958–2016, were analyzed. The reviews themselves were published between 1959 and 2017. Analyzing archive resource guides, the author deals with very sensitive material which is very challenging to be assessed explicitly. Each time, the reviews resulted from extensive studies, which were often the result of time-consuming work performed by teams consisting of many experts. The question of whether there is still a place for traditional book guides to archive resources in the modern world will probably remain an open question for a long time. The analysis of guidebooks issued in the traditional form is always a unique moment and invariably constitutes a great challenge for all archives. Each time it is associated with the intensification of work; it allows for the improvement and unification of archival records. It also provides a greater precision of the existing information on the archive resources. The analyzed reviews of the state archive resource guides show how many possibilities there may occur to commit a mistake in the process of such an analysis.
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Moore, P. Geoffrey. "Frederick William Flattely (1888–1937): naturalist and “Renaissance man”". Archives of Natural History 47, n.º 2 (outubro de 2020): 356–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2020.0660.

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Attention is drawn to the contributions of Frederick William Flattely (1888–1937), noting the wide range of his natural history publications. He is best known for his ground-breaking guidebook on shore ecology, The Biology of the Sea-shore, first published with Charles Walton in 1922. Both started their careers at University College of Wales, Aberystwyth. Flattely was greatly influenced there by Professor Herbert J. Fleure; hence his interest in environmental matters, agriculture and parasitology. After removing via the University of Aberdeen to the University of Durham and concentrating on marine issues, he moved thence to the League of Nations in Rome as a technical editor (using his extensive linguistic skills). Of German extraction, he changed his surname from Durlacher to Flattely in 1914. He eventually took-up a position teaching biology at Leighton Park School, Reading. He is remembered there as an excellent teacher and motivator of students.
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SATOI, Shinichi, Fuyuka HANYU, Akira SOSHIRODA e Takashi TSUTSUMI. "A Study of the Characteristics of Tourist Guidebooks about Japan in English for Foreigners in the Meiji Era (1868-1912)". Journal of The Japanese Institute of Landscape Architecture 66, n.º 5 (2003): 389–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.5632/jila.66.389.

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Behrendt, Andrew. "Educating Apostles of the Homeland: Tourism and "Honismeret" in Interwar Hungary". Hungarian Cultural Studies 7 (9 de janeiro de 2015): 159–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ahea.2014.168.

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Promoters of domestic tourism in Hungary between the world wars laid blame for poor business at the feet of many causes. But their loudest and most persistent accusation was that Hungarians did not travel their homeland because they did not properly “know it.” At the same time, geographers, educators, and politicians made the nearly identical claim that Hungarians were lacking in honismeret, or “knowledge of one’s homeland,” and needed to banish their ignorance if they were to truly and adequately love their country. This article explores one confluence of these two streams. Between 1934 and 1942, metropolitan authorities sponsored an ambitious educational program, the School Excursion Trains of the Capital City of Budapest [Budapest Székesfőváros Iskolai Kirándulóvonatai], which aimed to improve the honismeret of high school students by giving them first-hand experience of dozens of Hungarian cities and regions. Through a close analysis of the 31-volume series of guidebooks produced for the benefit of the Excursion Train passengers, this article argues that the fundamental goal of the program was to transform Hungary from an abstract territorial space into a set of concrete places to which students could feel personally attached, and therefore better “know.”
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Dechesne, Marieke, Jim Cole e Christopher Martin. "Field guide to Laramide basin evolution and drilling activity in North Park and Middle Park, Colorado". Mountain Geologist 53, n.º 4 (outubro de 2016): 283–329. http://dx.doi.org/10.31582/rmag.mg.53.4.283.

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This two-day field trip provides an overview of the geologic history of the North Park–Middle Park area and its past and recent drilling activity. Stops highlight basin formation and the consequences of geologic configuration on oil and gas plays and development. The trip focuses on work from ongoing U.S. Geological Survey research in this area (currently part of the Cenozoic Landscape Evolution of the Southern Rocky Mountains Project funded by the National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program). Surface mapping is integrated with perspective from petroleum exploration within the basin. The starting point is the west flank of the Denver Basin to compare and contrast the latest Cretaceous through Eocene basin fill on both flanks of the Front Range. The next stop continues on the south end of the North Park–Middle Park area, about 60 miles [95km] west from the first stop. A general clockwise loop is described by following U.S. Highway 40 from Frasier via Granby and Kremmling to Muddy Pass after which CO Highway 14 is followed to Walden for an overnight stay. On the second day after a loop north of Walden, the Continental Divide is crossed at Willow Creek Pass for a return to Granby via Highway 125. The single structural basin that underlies both physiographic depressions of North Park and Middle Park originated during the latest Cretaceous to Eocene Laramide orogeny (Tweto, 1957, 1975; Dickinson et al., 1988). It largely filled with Paleocene to Eocene sediments and is bordered on the east by the Front Range, on the west by the Park Range and Gore Range, on the north by Independence Mountain and to the south by the Williams Fork and Vasquez Mountains (Figure 1). This larger Paleocene-Eocene structural basin is continuous underneath the Continental Divide, which dissects the basin in two approximately equal physiographic depressions, the ‘Parks.’ Therefore Cole et al. (2010) proposed the name ‘Colorado Headwaters Basin’ or ‘CHB,’ rather than North Park–Middle Park basin (Tweto 1957), to eliminate any confusion between the underlying larger Paleocene-Eocene basin and the two younger depressions that developed after the middle Oligocene. The name was derived from the headwaters of the Colorado, North Platte, Laramie, Cache La Poudre, and Big Thompson Rivers which are all within or near the study area. In this field guide, we will use the name Colorado Headwaters Basin (CHB) over North Park–Middle Park basin. Several workers have described the geology in the basin starting with reports from Marvine who was part of the Hayden Survey and wrote about Middle Park in 1874, Hague and Emmons reported on North Park as part of the King Survey in 1877, Cross on Middle Park (1892), and Beekly surveyed the coal resources of North Park in 1915. Further reconnaissance geologic mapping was performed by Hail (1965 and 1968) and Kinney (1970) in the North Park area and by Izett (1968, 1975), and Izett and Barclay (1973) in Middle Park. Most research has focused on coal resources (Madden, 1977; Stands, 1992; Roberts and Rossi, 1999), and oil and gas potential (1957, all papers in the RMAG guidebook to North Park; subsurface structural geologic analysis of both Middle Park and North Park (the CHB) by oil and gas geologist Wellborn (1977a)). A more comprehensive overview of all previous geologic research in the basin can be found in Cole et al. (2010). Oil and gas exploration started in 1925 when Continental Oil's Sherman A-1 was drilled in the McCallum field in the northeast part of the CHB. It produced mostly CO2 from the Dakota Sandstone and was dubbed the ‘Snow cone’ well. Later wells were more successful finding oil and/or gas, and exploration and production in the area is ongoing, most notably in the unconventional Niobrara play in the Coalmont-Hebron area.
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Livros sobre o assunto "Guidebooks, 1952"

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New Mexico Geological Society. Field Conference. Guidebook of the Rio Grande country, central New Mexico: Third Field Conference, October 3-4-5, 1952. Socorro, N.M: The Society, 1996.

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Trust, Royal Yacht Britannia. The Royal Yacht Britannia: Official souvenir guidebook. Edinburgh: Someone Publishing Ltd in association with the Royal Yacht Britannia Trust, 2013.

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(Firm), Pneu Michelin. Michelin France, 1992. 8a ed. Paris: Pneu Michelin, Services de tourisme, 1992.

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Fodor's. Fodor's 1992 affordable Germany. New York: Fodor's Travel Publications, 1992.

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Fodor's. Fodor's 1992 affordable Great Britain. New York: Fodor's Travel Publications, Inc., 1992.

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William, Anderson. The Little House guidebook. New York: HarperCollins, 1996.

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William, Anderson. The Little house guidebook. New York: HarperTrophy, 2002.

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Sinclair, Valerie. New Jersey's best dining 1992. Stamford, CT: De Gustibus Press, 1991.

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Vaněčková, G. Praha Mariny Cvětajevové: Průvodce po místech pobytu M. Cvětajevové v Praze a blízkém okolí 1922-1925. Praha: Společnost Mariny Cvětajevové, 2013.

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Thai, Kānthō̜ngthīeo hǣng Prathēt, ed. A traveller's guide to Thailand, 1991-1992. [Bangkok]: Tourism Authority of Thailand, 1991.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Guidebooks, 1952"

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Vlitos, Paul. "“Your Successful Man of Letters Is Your Successful Tradesman”: Fiction and the Marketplace in British Author’s Guides of the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries". In New Directions in Book History, 107–27. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-53614-5_4.

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AbstractAs Christopher Hilliard has noted, the 1890s and 1900s saw in Britain the development of a flourishing “literary advice industry” of which the “first goods were guidebooks” (Hilliard in To Exercise Our Talents: The Democratization of Writing in Britain. Harvard University Press, London and Cambridge, MA, 2006, p. 20). Examples include Arnold Bennett’s How to Become an Author (1903), Walter Besant’s The Pen and the Book (1899), E. H. Lacon Watson’s Hints to Young Authors (1902), and Leopold Wagner’s How to Publish a Book (1898). As this chapter will explore, these authors’ guides mix technical advice on the rules of fiction with practical advice on the workings of the publishing industry and the financial side of authorship—and in so doing, I shall argue, both reflect and help contribute to dramatic changes in public understandings of the nature of authorship and the relationship between the writer and marketplace.
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Leppla, S. H. "Anthrax edema factor (Bacillus anthracis)". In Guidebook to Protein Toxins and Their Use in Cell Biology, 41–43. Oxford University PressOxford, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599555.003.0014.

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Abstract Anthrax edema factor (EF, originally designated Factor I) is a calmodulin-dependent adenylyl cyclase (Leppla 1982) which is one of the three proteins of the anthrax toxin complex (Smith et al. 1955; Leppla 1991a; 1995). The EF gene (Escuyer et al. 1988; Mock et al. 1988; Robertson et al. 1988; Tippetts and Robertson 1988) (GenBank accessions M23179 and M24074), located on the large pXO1 plasmid, encodes a precursor of 800 amino acids. Cleavage of the 33-amino acid signal peptide produces the 767 residue mature protein (PIR Protein database accession JS0029) having a mass of 88.8 kDa. The other proteins of the toxin complex are protective antigen (PA, GenBank M22589) and lethal factor (LF, GenBank M29081 and M30210; see separate entry in this book p. 00). None of the three proteins contain cysteine. As shown in Fig. 1, EF enters cells by binding to proteo¬ lytically activated, receptor-bound PA (Klimpel et al. 1992). EF (or LF) is then endocytosed and translocated from endosomes directly to the cytosol of cells, where it produces unregulated high concentrations of cAMP (Leppla 1982; Gordon et al. 1988). Entry of EF and LF is totally dependent on PA. The receptor for PA is unknown, but is present on nearly all types of cells (Escuyer and Collier 1991; Leppla 1991a).
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Gaul, Ulrike. "Dm Gapl". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 148–49. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0044.

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Abstract Mutations in Gap1 have been obtained by P enhancer trap insertion and chemical mutagenesis (Buckles et al. 1992; Gaul etal. 1992; Rogge etal. 1992). Gap1 was identified by screening cDNA libraries using genomic sequences flanking the P insertion (Gaul et al. 1992). The P enhancer trap is inserted into the open reading frame (ORF) of the Gap1 transcript, which is the cause of its mutagenicity. The DNA sequence of Drosophila Gap1 (Gaul etal. 1992) is shown in Fig. 1. The GenBank accession number is M86655.
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Feig, Larry A. "Ras-GRF". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 124–25. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0036.

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Abstract The complete Ras-GRF cDNA was isolated and then sequenced from both the mouse (Cen et al. 1992; Martegani eta/. 1992) and rat (see Fig. 1)(Shou etal. 1992). The former was accomplished by complementation of a mutant yeast strain lacking the Cdc25 gene, and the latter by mixed oligo polymerase chain reation (PCR) after prediction of amino acids that might be conserved among species. In one case, cDNAs were isolated that suggested smaller forms of Ras-GRF might be expressed in brain by alternative splicing (Cen etal. 1992).
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Seabra, Miguel C., Michael S. Brown e Joseph L. Goldstein. "Rab geranylgeranyl transferase". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 45–47. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0009.

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Abstract CAAX GGTase, also known as GGTase-I, is composed of twotightly coupled subunits, designated a. and 13 (Moomawand Casey 1992; Yokoyama and Gelb 1993). The a-subunitis identical to the a-subunit of FTase as determined byimmunological studies (Sea bra et al. 1991; Kohl et al. 1991;Moomaw and Casey 1992), cDNA cloning and expression(Zhang et al. 1994), and genetic studies in Saccharomycescerevisiae (Kohl et al. 1991; Mayer et al. 1992).
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Seabra, Miguel C., Joseph L. Goldstein e Michael S. Brown. "CAAX geranylgeranyl transferase". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 43–44. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0008.

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Abstract GGTase, also known as GGTase-I, is composed of two tightly coupled subunits, designated α and β (Moomawand Casey 1992; Yokoyama and Gelb 1993). The a-subunit is identical to the a-subunit of FTase as determined by immunological studies (Seabra et al. 1991; Kohl et al. 1991; Moomaw and Casey 1992), cDNA cloning and expression (Zhang et al. 1994), and genetic studies in Saccharomycescerevisiae (Kohl et al. 1991; Mayer et al. 1992).
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Bucci, Cecilia, Anne Liitcke, Paul Dupree e Marino Zerial. "Rab5b and Rab5c". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 330–32. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0095.

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Abstract Rab5b and Rab5c were identified by Chavrier etal. (1992), using a PCR approach to amplify Rab proteins from embryonic day 17 mouse kidney cDNA. The two oligonucleotides used corresponded to the GXXXXGKS/T and to the WDTAGQE conserved regions. Using modified RACE protocols (Frohman et al. 1988; Walker et al. 1992), cDNA clones encoding Rab5b and Rab5c from mouse kidney RNA were identified. Rab5b was also independently cloned from a human endothelial cDNA library (Wilson and Wilson 1992).
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Leevers, Sally, e Chris Marshall. "MAP kinase activators: Mekl, Mek2". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 156–59. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0046.

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Abstract Sequencing of cDNAs from mouse, rat, rabbit, human and hamster has revealed that there are at least two Mek genes encoding Mekl and Mek2 (Ashworth etal. 1992; Crews et al. 1992; Otsu et al. 1993; Seger et al. 1992; Wu et al. 1993a,b; Zheng and Guan 1993). In addition, there is evidence for an alternatively spliced form of Mekl (Mekl b) that lacks 26 amino acids between domains V and Via (Seger et al. 1992). Mekl and Mek2 have a proline rich domain between kinase subdomains X and XI. In Xenopus laevis cDNA cloning has revealed the existence of a homologue of Mekl, XMEK1 (Kosako et al. 1993), as well as a predicted protein (XMEK2) that lacks the proline rich domain (Yashar etal. 1993).
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Parton, Robert G., e Marino Zerial. "RhoD". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 221. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0068.

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Abstract RhoD was identified from mouse kidney using a PCR-based approach (Chavrier etal. 1992), and cDNA clones encoding RhoD were obtained (Grummt etal. 1992) using modified RACE protocols on mouse kidney RNA (Frohman et al. 1988). The GenBank accession number is X84325.
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Downward, Julian. "GRB2". In Guidebook to the Sinall GTPases, 113–15. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198599456.003.0033.

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Abstract it was identified genetically by its involvement in the vulval development pathway (Clark et al. 1992). Human GRB2 cDNA was cloned independently by using the tyrosine phosphorylated C-terminal tail of the EGF receptor to probe a brain XGT11 protein expression library (Lowenstein et al. 1992). The name, standing for growth factor receptor-bound protein 2, reflects the cloning protocol. The rat homologue of GRB2 was cloned independently using a consensus probe for SH2 sequences and was initially named ASH, for abundant Src homology protein (Matuoka et al. 1992).
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