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Kenneth Wester

Researcher at Uppsala University

Publications -  74
Citations -  10118

Kenneth Wester is an academic researcher from Uppsala University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteomics & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 74 publications receiving 9249 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenneth Wester include Uppsala University Hospital.

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Direct observation of individual endogenous protein complexes in situ by proximity ligation

TL;DR: This method is used to show specific regulation of protein-protein interactions between endogenous Myc and Max oncogenic transcription factors in response to interferon-γ (IFN-γ) signaling and low-molecular-weight inhibitors.
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Towards a knowledge-based Human Protein Atlas

TL;DR: The analysis here suggests that state stem cell funding programs are sufficiently large and established that simply ending the programs, at least in the absence of substantial investment in the field by other funding sources, could have deleterious effects.
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A Human Protein Atlas for Normal and Cancer Tissues Based on Antibody Proteomics

TL;DR: A new publicly available database containing, in the first version, ∼400,000 high resolution images corresponding to more than 700 antibodies toward human proteins, providing a knowledge base for functional studies and to allow queries about protein profiles in normal and disease tissues.
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A Genecentric Human Protein Atlas for Expression Profiles Based on Antibodies

TL;DR: A new version (4.0) of the Human Protein Atlas has been developed in a genecentric manner with the inclusion of all human genes and splice variants predicted from genome efforts together with a visualization of each protein with characteristics such as predicted membrane regions, signal peptide, and protein domains and new plots showing the uniqueness of every fraction of eachprotein toward all other human proteins.
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Towards a human proteome atlas: high-throughput generation of mono-specific antibodies for tissue profiling.

TL;DR: It is shown that antibodies specific to human proteins can be generated in a high‐throughput manner involving stringent affinity purification using recombinant protein epitope signature tags (PrESTs) as immunogens and affinity‐ligands.