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Robin Antrobus

Researcher at University of Cambridge

Publications -  89
Citations -  4125

Robin Antrobus is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Innate immune system & Human cytomegalovirus. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 83 publications receiving 3157 citations.

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NOTCH1 mediates a switch between two distinct secretomes during senescence

TL;DR: It is shown that the dynamic alteration of NOTCH1 activity during senescence dictates a functional balance between these two distinct secretomes: one representing TGF-β and the other pro-inflammatory cytokines, highlighting that NotCH1 is a temporospatial controller of secretome composition.
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Epigenetic silencing by the HUSH complex mediates position-effect variegation in human cells

TL;DR: A nonlethal forward genetic screen in near-haploid KBM7 cells identified the HUSH (human silencing hub) complex, comprising three poorly characterized proteins, TASOR, MPP8, and periphilin; this complex is absent from Drosophila but is conserved from fish to humans.
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Cell Surface Proteomic Map of HIV Infection Reveals Antagonism of Amino Acid Metabolism by Vpu and Nef

TL;DR: This work took a distinct, systems-level, quantitative proteomic approach to gain a comprehensive, unbiased overview of how HIV infection remodels the T cell surface, and defined a unique paradigm of HIV interference with immunometabolism.
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Multivariate proteomic profiling identifies novel accessory proteins of coated vesicles

TL;DR: A multivariate proteomics approach identified numerous new clathrin-coated vesicle proteins as well as the first AP-4 accessory protein, and also revealed how auxilin depletion causes mitotic arrest through sequestration of spindle proteins inClathrin cages.
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Role for the obesity-related FTO gene in the cellular sensing of amino acids

TL;DR: A role for FTO is described in the coupling of amino acid levels to mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 signaling, suggesting that FTO may influence body composition through playing a role in cellular nutrient sensing.