Skip to search form
Skip to main content
Skip to account menu
Semantic Scholar
Semantic Scholar's Logo
Search 226,184,850 papers from all fields of science
Search
Sign In
Create Free Account
U1 small nuclear RNA
Known as:
U1 RNA
, U1 snRNA
National Institutes of Health
Create Alert
Alert
Related topics
Related topics
3 relations
RNU1-3 gene
RNU1-4 gene
Broader (1)
Small Nuclear RNA
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
1999
1999
Experimental Models of Protein–RNA Interaction: Isolation and Analyses of tRNAPhe and U1 snRNA-Binding Peptides from Bacteriophage Display Libraries
P. Agris
,
M. T. Marchbank
,
+8 authors
S. Deutscher
Journal of Protein Chemistry
1999
Corpus ID: 36341930
Peptides that bind either U1 small nuclear RNA (U1 snRNA) or the anticodon stem and loop of yeast tRNAPhe (tRNAACPhe) were…
Expand
Highly Cited
1997
Highly Cited
1997
Inhibition of fibrillin 1 expression using U1 snRNA as a vehicle for the presentation of antisense targeting sequence.
R. Montgomery
,
H. Dietz
Human Molecular Genetics
1997
Corpus ID: 13542178
This study examines whether the mimicking of selected properties of naturally occurring antisense RNAs in prokaryotes allows…
Expand
Highly Cited
1983
Highly Cited
1983
U1 small nuclear RNA genes are located on human chromosome 1 and are expressed in mouse-human hybrid cells
E. Lund
,
C. Bostock
,
M. Robertson
,
S. Christie
,
J. Mitchen
,
J. Dahlberg
Molecular and Cellular Biology
1983
Corpus ID: 45797981
The majority, and perhaps all, of the genes for human U1 small nuclear RNA (U1 RNA) were shown to be located on the short arm of…
Expand
1982
1982
Relationship between snRNA species contained in nuclear antigens recognized by autoantibodies and the clinical profile in systemic rheumatic diseases.
C. Assens
,
H. Graafland
,
J. Liautard
,
J. Sri-Widada
,
C. Brunel
,
P. Jeanteur
Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine…
1982
Corpus ID: 19621026
Antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens (ENA) are generally used in the diagnosis of connective tissue diseases. Using a rapid…
Expand
By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our
Privacy Policy
(opens in a new tab)
,
Terms of Service
(opens in a new tab)
, and
Dataset License
(opens in a new tab)
ACCEPT & CONTINUE