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Steven P. Gygi

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  778
Citations -  147003

Steven P. Gygi is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteome & Phosphorylation. The author has an hindex of 172, co-authored 704 publications receiving 129173 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven P. Gygi include University of Rochester Medical Center & Cell Signaling Technology.

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Nudt21 Controls Cell Fate by Connecting Alternative Polyadenylation to Chromatin Signaling.

TL;DR: The RNA-processing factor Nudt21 is identified as a novel post-transcriptional regulator of cell fate change using transcription-factor-induced reprogramming as a screening assay and a direct, previously unappreciated link between alternative polyadenylation and chromatin signaling is established.
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The γTuRC Revisited: A Comparative Analysis of Interphase and Mitotic Human γTuRC Redefines the Set of Core Components and Identifies the Novel Subunit GCP8

TL;DR: GCP8 is the first subunit with an interphase-specific role in centrosomal γ-tubulin recruitment and microtubule nucleation and identified various interactors including the novel core subunit GCP8.
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Protein analysis by mass spectrometry and sequence database searching: tools for cancer research in the post-genomic era.

TL;DR: This report describes the application of tandem mass spectrometry and database searching to two problems which are prototypical for cancer research and indeed for biomedical research in general, and identifies gel‐separated, low abundance proteins based on amino acid sequence composition following coimmunoprecipitation with the human apoptosis inhibitor protein BclXL.
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Single copies of Sec61 and TRAP associate with a nontranslating mammalian ribosome.

TL;DR: The structure of a ribosome-channel complex from mammalian endoplasmic reticulum in which the channel has been visualized at 11 A resolution is reported and it is shown that mammalian and bacterial ribosomes-channel complexes have similar architectures.