M
Marian Carlson
Researcher at Columbia University
Publications - 130
Citations - 21547
Marian Carlson is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Saccharomyces cerevisiae & Gene. The author has an hindex of 73, co-authored 130 publications receiving 20881 citations. Previous affiliations of Marian Carlson include Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Journal ArticleDOI
LKB1 is the upstream kinase in the AMP-activated protein kinase cascade
Angela Woods,Stephen R. Johnstone,Kristina Dickerson,Fiona C. Leiper,Lee G.D. Fryer,Dietbert Neumann,Uwe Schlattner,Theo Wallimann,Marian Carlson,David Carling +9 more
TL;DR: The results identify a link between two protein kinases, previously thought to lie in unrelated, distinct pathways, that are associated with human diseases.
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The AMP-activated/SNF1 protein kinase subfamily: metabolic sensors of the eukaryotic cell?
TL;DR: AMP-activated protein kinase and SNF1-related protein kinases in higher plants are likely to be involved in the response of plant cells to environmental and/or nutritional stress.
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Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase-β acts upstream of AMP-activated protein kinase in mammalian cells
Angela Woods,Kristina Dickerson,Richard Heath,Seung-Pyo Hong,Milica Momcilovic,Stephen R. Johnstone,Marian Carlson,David Carling +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that AMPK is also activated by Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase (CaMKK) and suggested that AM PK may play a role in Ca( 2+)-mediated signal transduction pathways.
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A Yeast Gene that is Essential for Release from Glucose Repression Encodes a Protein Kinase
John L. Celenza,Marian Carlson +1 more
TL;DR: Findings indicate that SNF1 encodes a protein kinase and suggest that protein phosphorylation plays a critical role in regulation by carbon catabolite repression in eukaryotic cells.
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Ssn6-Tup1 is a general repressor of transcription in yeast.
TL;DR: It is proposed that Ssn6-Tup1 is a general repressor of transcription in yeast, recruited to target promoters by a variety of sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins.