Institution
Collège de France
Education•Paris, France•
About: Collège de France is a education organization based out in Paris, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Dopamine. The organization has 6541 authors who have published 11983 publications receiving 648742 citations. The organization is also known as: College de France.
Topics: Population, Dopamine, Dopaminergic, Receptor, Neural crest
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The use of a whole-mantle seismic imaging technique is described that reveals the presence of broad, quasi-vertical conduits beneath many prominent hotspots, and it is shown that the imaged conduits are robustly broader than classical thermal plume tails, suggesting that they are long-lived, and may have a thermochemical origin.
Abstract: Plumes of hot upwelling rock rooted in the deep mantle have been proposed as a possible origin of hotspot volcanoes, but this idea is the subject of vigorous debate. On the basis of geodynamic computations, plumes of purely thermal origin should comprise thin tails, only several hundred kilometres wide, and be difficult to detect using standard seismic tomography techniques. Here we describe the use of a whole-mantle seismic imaging technique--combining accurate wavefield computations with information contained in whole seismic waveforms--that reveals the presence of broad (not thin), quasi-vertical conduits beneath many prominent hotspots. These conduits extend from the core-mantle boundary to about 1,000 kilometres below Earth's surface, where some are deflected horizontally, as though entrained into more vigorous upper-mantle circulation. At the base of the mantle, these conduits are rooted in patches of greatly reduced shear velocity that, in the case of Hawaii, Iceland and Samoa, correspond to the locations of known large ultralow-velocity zones. This correspondence clearly establishes a continuous connection between such zones and mantle plumes. We also show that the imaged conduits are robustly broader than classical thermal plume tails, suggesting that they are long-lived, and may have a thermochemical origin. Their vertical orientation suggests very sluggish background circulation below depths of 1,000 kilometres. Our results should provide constraints on studies of viscosity layering of Earth's mantle and guide further research into thermochemical convection.
640 citations
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TL;DR: It is reported that neuropilin 2 expression in the vascular system is restricted to veins and lymphatic vessels, and homozygous Nrp2 mutants show absence or severe reduction of small lymphatic Vessels and capillaries during development.
Abstract: Neuropilin 2 is a receptor for class III semaphorins and for certain members of the vascular endothelial growth factor family. Targeted inactivation of the neuropilin 2 gene (Nrp2) has previously shown its role in neural development. We report that neuropilin 2 expression in the vascular system is restricted to veins and lymphatic vessels. Homozygous Nrp2 mutants show absence or severe reduction of small lymphatic vessels and capillaries during development. This correlated with a reduction of DNA synthesis in the lymphatic endothelial cells of the mutants. Arteries, veins and larger, collecting lymphatic vessels developed normally, suggesting that neuropilin 2 is selectively required for the formation of small lymphatic vessels and capillaries.
639 citations
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636 citations
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TL;DR: It is proposed that TIF1, which contains several conserved domains found in transcriptional regulatory proteins, is a mediator of ligand‐dependent AF‐2, and the N‐terminal moiety is fused to B‐raf in the mouse oncoprotein T18.
Abstract: Nuclear receptors (NRs) bound to response elements mediate the effects of cognate ligands on gene expression. Their ligand-dependent activation function, AF-2, presumably acts on the basal transcription machinery through intermediary proteins/mediators. We have isolated a mouse nuclear protein, TIF1, which enhances RXR and RAR AF-2 in yeast and interacts in a ligand-dependent manner with several NRs in yeast and mammalian cells, as well as in vitro. Remarkably, these interactions require the amino acids constituting the AF-2 activating domain conserved in all active NRs. Moreover, the oestrogen receptor (ER) AF-2 antagonist hydroxytamoxifen cannot promote ER-TIF1 interaction. We propose that TIF1, which contains several conserved domains found in transcriptional regulatory proteins, is a mediator of ligand-dependent AF-2. Interestingly, the TIF1 N-terminal moiety is fused to B-raf in the mouse oncoprotein T18.
634 citations
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TL;DR: The possibility of tuning the optical response of MOFs through rational functionalization of the linking unit, and the strength of combined synthetic/computational approaches for targeting functionalized hybrid materials are illustrated.
Abstract: Herein we discuss band gap modification of MIL-125, a TiO2/1,4-benzenedicarboxylate (bdc) metal–organic framework (MOF). Through a combination of synthesis and computation, we elucidated the electronic structure of MIL-125 with aminated linkers. The band gap decrease observed when the monoaminated bdc-NH2 linker was used arises from donation of the N 2p electrons to the aromatic linking unit, resulting in a red-shifted band above the valence-band edge of MIL-125. We further explored in silico MIL-125 with the diaminated linker bdc-(NH2)2 and other functional groups (−OH, −CH3, −Cl) as alternative substitutions to control the optical response. The bdc-(NH2)2 linking unit was predicted to lower the band gap of MIL-125 to 1.28 eV, and this was confirmed through the targeted synthesis of the bdc-(NH2)2-based MIL-125. This study illustrates the possibility of tuning the optical response of MOFs through rational functionalization of the linking unit, and the strength of combined synthetic/computational approach...
630 citations
Authors
Showing all 6597 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Pierre Chambon | 211 | 884 | 161565 |
Irving L. Weissman | 201 | 1141 | 172504 |
David R. Williams | 178 | 2034 | 138789 |
Kari Alitalo | 174 | 817 | 114231 |
Pierre Bourdieu | 153 | 592 | 194586 |
Stanislas Dehaene | 149 | 456 | 86539 |
Howard L. Weiner | 144 | 1047 | 91424 |
Alain Fischer | 143 | 770 | 81680 |
Yves Agid | 141 | 669 | 74441 |
Michel Foucault | 140 | 499 | 191296 |
Jean-Pierre Changeux | 138 | 672 | 76462 |
Jean-Marie Tarascon | 136 | 853 | 137673 |
K. Ganga | 132 | 272 | 99004 |
Jacques Delabrouille | 131 | 354 | 94923 |
G. Patanchon | 128 | 241 | 87233 |