C
Christophe Jardin
Researcher at University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Publications - 18
Citations - 251
Christophe Jardin is an academic researcher from University of Erlangen-Nuremberg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mutual information & Upper and lower bounds. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 17 publications receiving 216 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Channel Estimation for Diffusive Molecular Communications
TL;DR: This paper presents a training-based CIR estimation framework for MC systems, which aims at estimating the CIR based on the observed number of molecules at the receiver due to emission of a sequence of known numbers of molecules by the transmitter.
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Two isoforms of the protein kinase pUL97 of human cytomegalovirus are differentially regulated in their nuclear translocation.
Rike Webel,Jens Milbradt,Sabrina Auerochs,Vera Schregel,Christian Held,Katharina Nöbauer,Ebrahim Razzazi-Fazeli,Christophe Jardin,Thomas Wittenberg,Heinrich Sticht,Manfred Marschall +10 more
TL;DR: Interestingly, mapping experiments performed to identify the nuclear localization signal (NLS) of pUL97 strongly suggest that the mechanism of nuclear transport is distinct for the two isoforms, which might be linked with fine-regulatory differences between the twoisoforms.
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Nuclear import of isoforms of the cytomegalovirus kinase pUL97 is mediated by differential activity of NLS1 and NLS2 both acting through classical importin-α binding.
Rike Webel,Sara Marie Øie Solbak,Christian Held,Jens Milbradt,Andrea Groß,Jutta Eichler,Thomas Wittenberg,Christophe Jardin,Heinrich Sticht,Torgils Fossen,Manfred Marschall +10 more
TL;DR: The nucleocytoplasmic transport mechanism of the isoforms appeared to be differentially regulated, and this may have consequences for isoform-dependent functions of pUL97 during virus replication.
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Binding properties of SUMO-interacting motifs (SIMs) in yeast.
TL;DR: In this article, a large dataset of yeast SIMs was used to investigate the binding preferences for four representative SIM peptides and the relative stability of two previously observed alternative binding orientations (parallel, antiparallel) was assessed.
Journal ArticleDOI
DNA binding by Corynebacterium glutamicum TetR-type transcription regulator AmtR
Daniela Muhl,Nadja Jeßberger,Kristin Hasselt,Christophe Jardin,Heinrich Sticht,Andreas Burkovski +5 more
TL;DR: A characterization of functionally important amino acids in the DNA binding domain of AmTR and of crucial nucleotides in the AmtR recognition motif is presented and it is shown that the spacing of the binding motif half sites is crucial for repression of transcription by Amt R.