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Opher Gileadi

Researcher at Structural Genomics Consortium

Publications -  159
Citations -  7214

Opher Gileadi is an academic researcher from Structural Genomics Consortium. The author has contributed to research in topics: Helicase & DNA repair. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 154 publications receiving 6294 citations. Previous affiliations of Opher Gileadi include University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center & Stanford University.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protein production and purification.

Susanne Gräslund, +86 more
- 01 Feb 2008 - 
TL;DR: This review presents methods that could be applied at the outset of any project, a prioritized list of alternate strategies and a list of pitfalls that trip many new investigators.
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Codon optimization can improve expression of human genes in Escherichia coli: A multi-gene study

TL;DR: The trend is that heterologous expression of some proteins in bacteria can be improved by altering codon preference, but that this effect can be generally recapitulated by introducing rare codon tRNAs into the host cell.
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Crystal structures of histone demethylase JMJD2A reveal basis for substrate specificity.

TL;DR: How human JMJD2A (jumonji domain containing 2A), which is selective towards tri- and dimethylated histone H3 lysyl residues 9 and 36, discriminates between methylation states and achieves sequence selectivity for H3K9 is revealed.
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High-throughput production of human proteins for crystallization: the SGC experience.

TL;DR: The methods utilized in the Structural Genomics Consortium in Oxford are described, resulting in successful purification of 48% of human proteins attempted; of those, the structures of ∼40% were solved by X-ray crystallography.
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Scanning electron microscopy of cells and tissues under fully hydrated conditions

TL;DR: A hybrid technique combining the ease of use and ability to see into cells of optical microscopy with the higher resolution of electron microscopy is presented, indicating a potential for multilabeling and specific scintillating markers.