P
Peter G. Schultz
Researcher at Scripps Research Institute
Publications - 901
Citations - 96321
Peter G. Schultz is an academic researcher from Scripps Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amino acid & Transfer RNA. The author has an hindex of 156, co-authored 893 publications receiving 89716 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter G. Schultz include Novartis Foundation & University of California, Berkeley.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Organization of 'nanocrystal molecules' using DNA
A. Paul Alivisatos,A. Paul Alivisatos,Kai Johnsson,Xiaogang Peng,Xiaogang Peng,Troy E. Wilson,Colin J. Loweth,Marcel P. Bruchez,Marcel P. Bruchez,Peter G. Schultz +9 more
TL;DR: A strategy for the synthesis of 'nanocrystal molecules', in which discrete numbers of gold nanocrystals are organized into spatially defined structures based on Watson-Crick base-pairing interactions is described.
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Coordinated transcription of key pathways in the mouse by the circadian clock.
Satchidananda Panda,Marina P. Antoch,Brooke H. Miller,Andrew I. Su,Andrew I. Su,Andrew B. Schook,Marty Straume,Peter G. Schultz,Peter G. Schultz,Steve A. Kay,Steve A. Kay,Joseph S. Takahashi,John B. Hogenesch +12 more
TL;DR: Genetic and genomic analysis suggests that a relatively small number of output genes are directly regulated by core oscillator components, and major processes regulated by the SCN and liver were found to be under circadian regulation.
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Metabolomics analysis reveals large effects of gut microflora on mammalian blood metabolites
William R. Wikoff,Andrew T. Anfora,Jun Liu,Peter G. Schultz,Scott A. Lesley,Eric C. Peters,Gary Siuzdak +6 more
TL;DR: A broad, drug-like phase II metabolic response of the host to metabolites generated by the microbiome was observed, suggesting that the gut microflora has a direct impact on the drug metabolism capacity of theHost.
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Adding New Chemistries to the Genetic Code
Chang C. Liu,Peter G. Schultz +1 more
TL;DR: The development of new orthogonal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase/tRNA pairs has led to the addition of approximately 70 unnatural amino acids to the genetic codes of Escherichia coli, yeast, and mammalian cells, which provide new opportunities to generate proteins with enhanced or novel properties and probes of protein structure and function.
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Large-scale analysis of the human and mouse transcriptomes
Andrew I. Su,Michael P. Cooke,Keith A. Ching,Yaron Hakak,John R. Walker,Tim Wiltshire,Anthony P. Orth,Raquel Vega,Lisa M. Sapinoso,Aziz Moqrich,Ardem Patapoutian,Garret M. Hampton,Peter G. Schultz,Peter G. Schultz,John B. Hogenesch +14 more
TL;DR: This work generated and analyzed gene expression from 91 human and mouse samples across a diverse array of tissues, organs, and cell lines to reveal insights into molecular and physiological gene function, mechanisms of transcriptional regulation, disease etiology, and comparative genomics.