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Institution

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

NonprofitChevy 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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
25 Feb 1994-Cell
TL;DR: In vitro tests for the signaling functions of vHH-1 demonstrate that COS cells expressing the rat vhh-1 gene induce floor plate and motor neuron differentiation in neural plate explants, suggesting that vhhh-1 may contribute to the floor plateand motor neuron inducing activities of the notochord.

919 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work provides the most comprehensive genetic characterization of a sterol catabolic pathway to date, suggests putative roles for uncharacterized virulence genes, and precisely maps genes encoding potential drug targets.
Abstract: The pathways that comprise cellular metabolism are highly interconnected, and alterations in individual enzymes can have far-reaching effects. As a result, global profiling methods that measure gene expression are of limited value in predicting how the loss of an individual function will affect the cell. In this work, we employed a new method of global phenotypic profiling to directly define the genes required for the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A combination of high-density mutagenesis and deep-sequencing was used to characterize the composition of complex mutant libraries exposed to different conditions. This allowed the unambiguous identification of the genes that are essential for Mtb to grow in vitro, and proved to be a significant improvement over previous approaches. To further explore functions that are required for persistence in the host, we defined the pathways necessary for the utilization of cholesterol, a critical carbon source during infection. Few of the genes we identified had previously been implicated in this adaptation by transcriptional profiling, and only a fraction were encoded in the chromosomal region known to encode sterol catabolic functions. These genes comprise an unexpectedly large percentage of those previously shown to be required for bacterial growth in mouse tissue. Thus, this single nutritional change accounts for a significant fraction of the adaption to the host. This work provides the most comprehensive genetic characterization of a sterol catabolic pathway to date, suggests putative roles for uncharacterized virulence genes, and precisely maps genes encoding potential drug targets.

919 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
29 Aug 1986-Cell
TL;DR: Characterization of 27 insertional mutants of the hGR allowed the location of at least four functional domains, two of which correspond to the predicted DNA- and steroid-binding domains, raising the possibility that other regions in the receptor are necessary for full transcriptional activation but are not specifically involved in steroid or DNA binding.

919 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Jan 1989-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown that injected normal muscle precursor cells can fuse with pre-existing or regenerating mdx muscle fibres to render many of these fibres dystrophin-positive and so to partially or wholly rescue them from their biochemical defect.
Abstract: An important corollary to the recent advances in our understanding of the primary cause of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, is the validation of genuine genetic homologues as animal models of the disease in which potential therapies can be tested. The persistent skeletal muscle necrosis that characterizes human Duchenne muscular dystrophy is also seen in the mdx mouse and is, in both, a consequence of a deficiency of dystrophin, probably within the muscle fibres themselves. As injected muscle precursor cells of one genotype can fuse with host muscle fibres of a different genotype and express the donor genes, we decided to test grafts of normal muscle precursor cells to see if they could induce synthesis of dystrophin in innately dystrophin-deficient mdx muscle fibres. We show that injected normal muscle precursor cells can fuse with pre-existing or regenerating mdx muscle fibres to render many of these fibres dystrophin-positive and so to partially or wholly rescue them from their biochemical defect.

918 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
19 Apr 2002-Cell
TL;DR: The current understanding of the V(D)J recombination reaction and how it is regulated during lymphocyte development is reviewed and how defects in the mechanism or regulation can lead to human disease is discussed.

918 citations


Authors

Showing all 20486 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Bert Vogelstein247757332094
Richard A. Flavell2311328205119
Steven A. Rosenberg2181204199262
Kenneth W. Kinzler215640243944
Robert J. Lefkowitz214860147995
Rob Knight2011061253207
Irving L. Weissman2011141172504
Ronald M. Evans199708166722
Francis S. Collins196743250787
Craig B. Thompson195557173172
Thomas C. Südhof191653118007
Joan Massagué189408149951
Stuart H. Orkin186715112182
John P. A. Ioannidis1851311193612
Eric R. Kandel184603113560
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202330
2022228
20211,583
20201,587
20191,591
20181,394