T
Thomas Langer
Researcher at Max Planck Society
Publications - 253
Citations - 26029
Thomas Langer is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mitochondrion & mitochondrial fusion. The author has an hindex of 82, co-authored 222 publications receiving 23219 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Langer include Heidelberg University & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Mitochondrial gene variant contributing to coronary artery disease
Naif A.M. Almontashiri,Allen C. T. Teng,Hsiao‐Huei Chen,Brian L. M. Cheng,Mohammad Afaque Alam,Matthew Ta,Robert Roberts,Thomas Langer,Heidi M. McBride,Alexandre F.R. Stewart +9 more
The seven wonders of ubiquitin: a multi-interview - Personal insights into the ubiquitin field
N Pariente,Ivan Dikic,W Harper,R Hay,Thomas Langer,Michael Rape,Titia K. Sixma,Henning Walczak +7 more
Abstract: Ivan Dikic, Professor and Director of Institute of Biochemistry II at the Goethe University and Director of the Buchmann Institute for Molecular Life Sciences (BMLS), Germany Wade Harper, Professor of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, USA Ron Hay, Chair of Molecular Biology, University of Dundee, UK Thomas Langer, Professor at the Institute for Genetics, University of Cologne, Germany Michael Rape, Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of California at Berkeley and Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, USA Titia Sixma, Division of Biochemistry, Netherlands Cancer Institute, Netherlands Henning Walczak, Professor of Cancer Biology, University College London, UK
Journal ArticleDOI
IND02-01 Overview of the innovative medicines initiative NeuoDerisk project
TL;DR: In this paper , the existence and uniqueness of a local maximal solution to an H1-critical stochastic wave equation with multiplicative noise on a smooth bounded domain D⊂R2 with exponential nonlinearity were proved.
Posted ContentDOI
A nutritional memory impairs survival, transcriptional and metabolic response to dietary restriction in old mice
Oliver Hahn,Lisa F Drews,An Nguyen,Takashi Tatsuta,L. Gkioni,Oliver Hendrich,Qifeng Zhang,Thomas Langer,Scott D. Pletcher,Michael J.O. Wakelam,Andreas Beyer,S. Groenke,Linda Partridge,Linda Partridge +13 more
TL;DR: A late-life DR switch experiment employing 800 mice provides evidence for a nutritional memory as a limiting factor for DR-induced longevity and metabolic remodeling of WAT in mammals.