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Benjamin A. Garcia

Researcher at University of Pennsylvania

Publications -  467
Citations -  40286

Benjamin A. Garcia is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Histone & Chromatin. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 425 publications receiving 31491 citations. Previous affiliations of Benjamin A. Garcia include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich & Purdue University.

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Identifying Host Factors Associated with DNA Replicated During Virus Infection.

TL;DR: This work uncovered host factors deactivated by early viral proteins, and identified a subgroup of nucleolar proteins that aid virus replication that is associated with viral genomes during infection with adenovirus, herpes simplex virus and vaccinia virus.
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Paternal cocaine taking elicits epigenetic remodeling and memory deficits in male progeny.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that paternal cocaine exposure produces epigenetic remodeling in the hippocampus leading to NMDA receptor-dependent memory formation and synaptic plasticity impairments only in male progeny, which has significant implications for the male descendants of chronic cocaine users.
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Protein quantification across hundreds of experimental conditions.

TL;DR: This work introduces techniques that combine graph-theoretic algorithms with space-partitioning data structures to collect relative protein abundance data across hundreds of experimental conditions and replicates and demonstrates the scalability of these techniques by applying them to a large dataset.
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A Global View of RNA-Protein Interactions Identifies Post-transcriptional Regulators of Root Hair Cell Fate

TL;DR: This global analysis reveals post-transcriptional regulators of plant root epidermal cell fate and finds that SERRATE functions in a microRNA-dependent manner to inhibit hair cell fate, while also terminating growth of root hairs mostly independent of microRNA biogenesis.
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Bottom-Up and Middle-Down Proteomics Have Comparable Accuracies in Defining Histone Post-Translational Modification Relative Abundance and Stoichiometry

TL;DR: It is evidenced that the middle-down strategy is at least equally reliable to bottom-up in quantifying histone PTMs, as it provided similar performance in defining accurate PTM stoichiometry.