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Institution

Applied Biosystems

About: Applied Biosystems is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Mass spectrometry & Capillary electrophoresis. The organization has 1521 authors who have published 1579 publications receiving 285423 citations.


Papers
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Patent
17 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, an instrument for performing highly accurate PCR employing an assembly, a heated cover, and an internal computer, is provided, made up of a sample block, a number of Peltier thermal electric devices, and a heat sink, clamped together.
Abstract: An instrument for performing highly accurate PCR employing an assembly, a heated cover, and an internal computer, is provided. The assembly is made up of a sample block, a number of Peltier thermal electric devices, and a heat sink, clamped together. A control algorithm manipulates the current supplied to thermoelectric coolers such that the dynamic thermal performance of a block can be controlled so that pre-defined thermal profiles of sample temperature can be executed. The sample temperature is calculated instead of measured using a design specific model and equations. The control software includes calibration diagnostics which permit variation in the performance of thermoelectric coolers from instrument to instrument to be compensated for such that all instruments perform identically. The block/heat sink assembly can be changed to another of the same or different design. The assembly carries the necessary information required to characterize its own performance in an on-board memory device, allowing the assembly to be interchangeable among instruments while retaining its precision operating characteristics.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A total of 116, 118 basepairs derived from three cosmids spanning the ERCC1 locus of human chromosome 19q13.3 have been sequenced with automated fluorescence-based sequencers and analysed by polymerase chain reaction amplification and computer methods.
Abstract: A total of 116,118 basepairs (bp) derived from three cosmids spanning the ERCC1 locus of human chromosome 19q13.3 have been sequenced with automated fluorescence-based sequencers and analysed by polymerase chain reaction amplification and computer methods. The assembled sequence forms two contigs totalling 105,831 bp, which contain a human fosB proto-oncogene, a gene encoding a protein phosphatase, two genes of unknown function and the previously-characterized ERCC1 DNA repair gene. This light band region has a high average density of 1.4 Alu repeats per kilobase. Human chromosome light bands could therefore contain up to 75,000 genes and 1.5 million Alu repeats.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1996-Genomics
TL;DR: It is demonstrated here that the Smith-Waterman (S-W) dynamic programming method and the optimized version of FASTA are significantly better able to distinguish true similarities from statistical noise than is the popular database search tool BLAST.

102 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Roger O'neill1
TL;DR: This review traces the discovery, characterization and use of a growing repertoire of enzymes, including endoglycosidases and glycoamidases, able to release glycoprotein oligosaccharides under mild conditions, that have become available in the last two decades.

102 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Cloning and sequencing of cDNA encoding B70 antigens from six cell lines has identified a group of three closely related alleles that form a subgroup of the B15 family that are close to that of the HLA-B consensus consistent with the difficulty in their serological definition.
Abstract: Although the B70 antigen exhibits allele frequencies of 8-23% in African and American black populations, it remains poorly defined. Cloning and sequencing of cDNA encoding B70 antigens from six cell lines has identified a group of three closely related alleles: B*1503, B*1509 and B*1510, that form a subgroup of the B15 family. The sequences of these alleles and, in particular, B*1503, are close to that of the HLA-B consensus consistent with the difficulty in their serological definition. The products of the three alleles correspond to three electrophoretically detected variants of the B70 antigen and some correlation with the B71 and B72 subspecificities of the B70 antigen can be made. A fourth allele, B*7901, previously described by Choo et al. (J. Immunol. 147: 174-180, 1991) that was not serologically typed as B70, differs by a single nucleotide substitution from B*1510. The sensitivity of alloantibodies to single differences in peptide binding residues suggest a role for bound peptides in the HLA-B70 alloantigenic specificities. The heavy chains encoded by the four alleles differ at four peptide binding residues of the antigen recognition site, the evolutionary modification of which can be explained in terms of interallelic recombination events.

102 citations


Authors

Showing all 1521 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard A. Gibbs172889249708
Friedrich C. Luft113109547619
Alexander N. Glazer7120821068
Vineet Bafna6823642574
Kevin R. Coombes6330823592
Darryl J. Pappin6117029409
Mark D. Johnson6028916103
György Marko-Varga5640912600
Paul Thomas5612844810
Gerald Zon5525611126
Michael W. Hunkapiller5113029756
Bjarni V. Halldorsson5114513180
David H. Hawke501579824
Ellson Y. Chen507128836
Sridhar Hannenhalli4916221959
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20182
20171
20164
20152
20147
201313