scispace - formally typeset
D

Douglas B. Kell

Researcher at University of Liverpool

Publications -  657
Citations -  55792

Douglas B. Kell is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Systems biology & Dielectric. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 634 publications receiving 50335 citations. Previous affiliations of Douglas B. Kell include Max Planck Society & University of Wales.

Papers
More filters
Journal Article

Molecular phenotyping of a UK population: defining the human serum metabolome. Metabolomics

TL;DR: Overall, this is a large scale and non-targeted chromatographic MS-based metabolomics study, using samples from over 1,000 individuals, to provide a comprehensive measurement of their serum metabolomes, providing an important baseline or reference dataset for understanding the ‘normal’ relative concentrations and variation in the human serum metabolome.
Journal ArticleDOI

An untargeted metabolomics strategy to measure differences in metabolite uptake and excretion by mammalian cell lines.

TL;DR: A new, 15-min untargeted metabolome method allows for the robust and convenient measurement of differences in the uptake of serum compounds by cell lines following incubation in serum, thereby advancing the knowledge of transporter substrates, both natural and xenobiotic compounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth energetics of Clostridium sporogenes NCIB 8053: modulation by CO2

TL;DR: A futile cycle involving carbon dioxide is proposed as a factor contributing to the variable extent of free energy dissipation within this organism.
Journal ArticleDOI

GeneORator: An Effective Strategy for Navigating Protein Sequence Space More Efficiently through Boolean OR-Type DNA Libraries

TL;DR: GeneORator is introduced, a novel strategy for creating DNA libraries based on the Boolean logical OR operator, which enables the screening of a greater diversity of mutation combinations, accessing a larger area of a protein’s sequence space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Convergent evolution to an aptamer observed in small populations on DNA microarrays

TL;DR: The development of aptamers on custom synthesized DNA microarrays is used to observe the paths taken through sequence-fitness space by three different evolutionary regimes: asexual reproduction, recombination and model-based evolution.