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Anne Imberty

Researcher at University of Grenoble

Publications -  406
Citations -  20811

Anne Imberty is an academic researcher from University of Grenoble. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lectin & Binding site. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 381 publications receiving 18759 citations. Previous affiliations of Anne Imberty include Bar-Ilan University & Joseph Fourier University.

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Deciphering the Glycan Preference of Bacterial Lectins by Glycan Array and Molecular Docking with Validation by Microcalorimetry and Crystallography

TL;DR: The established predictive protocol is proposed to rationalize large sets of data such as glycan arrays and to help in lead discovery projects based on such high throughput technology.
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The interplay of autophagy and β-Catenin signaling regulates differentiation in acute myeloid leukemia.

TL;DR: This study provides for the first time a link between E-Cadherin, the aberrant Wnt/β-Catenin signaling, autophagy and differentiation in acute myeloid leukemia.
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Structure determination of discoidin II from Dictyostelium discoideum and carbohydrate binding properties of the lectin domain

TL;DR: The first X‐ray structures of the wild‐type and recombinant Discoidin II in unliganded state and in complex with monosaccharides are presented and highlights the structural differentiation of the DS domain involved in many cell‐adhesion processes from the lectin activity of Dictyostelium discoidins.
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Tailor-made Janus lectin with dual avidity assembles glycoconjugate multilayers and crosslinks protocells

TL;DR: Janus lectin this article is a chimeric bispecific lectin with two rationally oriented and distinct recognition surfaces, which is able to bind independently to both fucosylated and sialylated glycoconjugates.
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Comparative aspects of glycosyltransferases.

TL;DR: In this paper, a fold-recognition approach was proposed to detect conserved motifs that have a direct role in the functional aspects of glycosyltransferases. But the method is not suitable for protein-protein interactions and only two structural folds have been identified among the fewer than one dozen GAs that have been crystallized.