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10.1074/jbc.X114.620666

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1074/jbc.X114.620666
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C4256308!4256308!25336639
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suck abstract from ncbi

pmid25336639      J+Biol+Chem 2014 ; 289 (49): 33712-29
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  • A Passion for Parasites #MMPMID25336639
  • Englund PT
  • J Biol Chem 2014[Dec]; 289 (49): 33712-29 PMID25336639show ga
  • I knew nothing and had thought nothing about parasites until 1971. In fact, if you had asked me before then, I might have commented that parasites were rather disgusting. I had been at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine for three years, and I was on the lookout for a new project. In 1971, I came across a paper in the Journal of Molecular Biology by Larry Simpson, a classmate of mine in graduate school. Larry's paper described a remarkable DNA structure known as kinetoplast DNA (kDNA), isolated from a parasite. kDNA, the mitochondrial genome of trypanosomatids, is a DNA network composed of several thousand interlocked DNA rings. Almost nothing was known about it. I was looking for a project on DNA replication, and I wanted it to be both challenging and important. I had no doubt that working with kDNA would be a challenge, as I would be exploring uncharted territory. I was also sure that the project would be important when I learned that parasites with kDNA threaten huge populations in underdeveloped tropical countries. Looking again at Larry's paper, I found the electron micrographs of the kDNA networks to be rather beautiful. I decided to take a chance on kDNA. Little did I know then that I would devote the next forty years of my life to studying kDNA replication.
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