Marcus B. Noyes

Analysis of homeodomain specificities allows the family-wide prediction of preferred recognition sites (2008)

Noyes, Marcus B., Christensen, Ryan G., Wakabayashi, Atsuya, Stormo, Gary D., Brodsky, Michael H., Wolfe, Scot A.

We describe the comprehensive characterization of homeodomain DNA-binding specificities from a metazoan genome. The analysis of all 84 independent homeodomains from D. melanogaster reveals the...

Targeted gene inactivation in zebrafish using engineered zinc-finger nucleases (2008)

Meng, Xiangdong, Noyes, Marcus B., Zhu, Lihua J., Lawson, Nathan D., Wolfe, Scot A.

Direct genomic manipulation at a specific locus is still not feasible in most vertebrate model organisms. In vertebrate cell lines, genomic lesions at a specific site have been introduced using...

A systematic characterization of factors that regulate Drosophila segmentation via a bacterial one-hybrid system (2008)

Noyes, Marcus B., Meng, Xiangdong, Wakabayashi, Atsuya, Sinha, Saurabh, Brodsky, Michael H., Wolfe, Scot A.

Specificity data for groups of transcription factors (TFs) in a common regulatory network can be used to computationally identify the location of cis-regulatory modules in a genome. The primary...

A systematic characterization of factors that regulate Drosophila segmentation via a bacterial one-hybrid system (2008)

Noyes, Marcus B., Meng, Xiangdong, Wakabayashi, Atsuya, Sinha, Saurabh, Brodsky, Michael H., Wolfe, Scot A.

Specificity data for groups of transcription factors (TFs) in a common regulatory network can be used to computationally identify the location of cis-regulatory modules in a genome. The primary...

A systematic characterization of factors that regulate Drosophila segmentation via a bacterial one-hybrid system

Noyes, Marcus B., Meng, Xiangdong, Wakabayashi, Atsuya, Sinha, Saurabh, Brodsky, Michael H., Wolfe, Scot A.

Specificity data for groups of transcription factors (TFs) in a common regulatory network can be used to computationally identify the location of cis-regulatory modules in a genome. The primary...