Institution
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Nonprofit•Chevy Chase, Maryland, United States•
About: Howard Hughes Medical Institute is a nonprofit organization based out in Chevy Chase, Maryland, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Gene & RNA. The organization has 20371 authors who have published 34677 publications receiving 5247143 citations. The organization is also known as: HHMI & hhmi.org.
Topics: Gene, RNA, Population, Cellular differentiation, Transcription factor
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In vivo evidence is provided that p53-dependent apoptosis, occurring in response to oncogenic events, is a critical regulator of tumorigenesis.
930 citations
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TL;DR: Structural, genetic and biochemical data show how the channel opens across the membrane, releases hydrophobic segments of membrane proteins laterally into lipid, and maintains the membrane barrier for small molecules.
Abstract: A decisive step in the biosynthesis of many proteins is their partial or complete translocation across the eukaryotic endoplasmic reticulum membrane or the prokaryotic plasma membrane. Most of these proteins are translocated through a protein-conducting channel that is formed by a conserved, heterotrimeric membrane-protein complex, the Sec61 or SecY complex. Depending on channel binding partners, polypeptides are moved by different mechanisms: the polypeptide chain is transferred directly into the channel by the translating ribosome, a ratcheting mechanism is used by the endoplasmic reticulum chaperone BiP, and a pushing mechanism is used by the bacterial ATPase SecA. Structural, genetic and biochemical data show how the channel opens across the membrane, releases hydrophobic segments of membrane proteins laterally into lipid, and maintains the membrane barrier for small molecules.
930 citations
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TL;DR: Circuit motifs that emerge from the data indicate a functional mechanism for a known cellular response in a ganglion cell that detects localized motion, and predict that another ganglions cell is motion sensitive.
Abstract: Comprehensive high-resolution structural maps are central to functional exploration and understanding in biology. For the nervous system, in which high resolution and large spatial extent are both needed, such maps are scarce as they challenge data acquisition and analysis capabilities. Here we present for the mouse inner plexiform layer--the main computational neuropil region in the mammalian retina--the dense reconstruction of 950 neurons and their mutual contacts. This was achieved by applying a combination of crowd-sourced manual annotation and machine-learning-based volume segmentation to serial block-face electron microscopy data. We characterize a new type of retinal bipolar interneuron and show that we can subdivide a known type based on connectivity. Circuit motifs that emerge from our data indicate a functional mechanism for a known cellular response in a ganglion cell that detects localized motion, and predict that another ganglion cell is motion sensitive.
929 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that the "BH3-only" molecule tBID induces a striking remodeling of mitochondrial structure with mobilization of the cytochrome c stores in cristae, independent of BAK, but is inhibited by CsA.
928 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that the D. melanogaster genome contains >50,000 enhancers and that multiple enhancers drive distinct subsets of expression of a gene in each tissue and developmental stage.
Abstract: We demonstrate the feasibility of generating thousands of transgenic Drosophila melanogaster lines in which the expression of an exogenous gene is reproducibly directed to distinct small subsets of cells in the adult brain. We expect the expression patterns produced by the collection of 5,000 lines that we are currently generating to encompass all neurons in the brain in a variety of intersecting patterns. Overlapping 3-kb DNA fragments from the flanking noncoding and intronic regions of genes thought to have patterned expression in the adult brain were inserted into a defined genomic location by site-specific recombination. These fragments were then assayed for their ability to function as transcriptional enhancers in conjunction with a synthetic core promoter designed to work with a wide variety of enhancer types. An analysis of 44 fragments from four genes found that >80% drive expression patterns in the brain; the observed patterns were, on average, comprised of 50,000 enhancers and that multiple enhancers drive distinct subsets of expression of a gene in each tissue and developmental stage. We expect that these lines will be valuable tools for neuroanatomy as well as for the elucidation of neuronal circuits and information flow in the fly brain.
927 citations
Authors
Showing all 20486 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Bert Vogelstein | 247 | 757 | 332094 |
Richard A. Flavell | 231 | 1328 | 205119 |
Steven A. Rosenberg | 218 | 1204 | 199262 |
Kenneth W. Kinzler | 215 | 640 | 243944 |
Robert J. Lefkowitz | 214 | 860 | 147995 |
Rob Knight | 201 | 1061 | 253207 |
Irving L. Weissman | 201 | 1141 | 172504 |
Ronald M. Evans | 199 | 708 | 166722 |
Francis S. Collins | 196 | 743 | 250787 |
Craig B. Thompson | 195 | 557 | 173172 |
Thomas C. Südhof | 191 | 653 | 118007 |
Joan Massagué | 189 | 408 | 149951 |
Stuart H. Orkin | 186 | 715 | 112182 |
John P. A. Ioannidis | 185 | 1311 | 193612 |
Eric R. Kandel | 184 | 603 | 113560 |