Institution
Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Facility•Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom•
About: Laboratory of Molecular Biology is a facility organization based out in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Gene & RNA. The organization has 19395 authors who have published 24236 publications receiving 2101480 citations.
Topics: Gene, RNA, DNA, Population, Transcription (biology)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A cDNA clone of SRF expressed in vitro generates protein that forms complexes indistinguishable from those formed with HeLa cell SRF, as judged by DNA binding specificity and the ability to promote SRE-dependent in vitro transcription.
862 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that in erythroid cells Lmo2 forms a novel DNA‐binding complex, with GATA‐1, TAL1 and E2A, and the recently identified LIM‐binding protein Ldb1/NLI, which may play a role in haematopoiesis.
Abstract: The LIM-only protein Lmo2, activated by chromosomal translocations in T-cell leukaemias, is normally expressed in haematopoiesis. It interacts with TAL1 and GATA-1 proteins, but the function of the interaction is unexplained. We now show that in erythroid cells Lmo2 forms a novel DNA-binding complex, with GATA-1, TAL1 and E2A, and the recently identified LIM-binding protein Ldb1/NLI. This oligomeric complex binds to a unique, bipartite DNA motif comprising an E-box, CAGGTG, followed approximately 9 bp downstream by a GATA site. In vivo assembly of the DNA-binding complex requires interaction of all five proteins and establishes a transcriptional transactivating complex. These data demonstrate one function for the LIM-binding protein Ldb1 and establish a function for the LIM-only protein Lmo2 as an obligatory component of an oligomeric, DNA-binding complex which may play a role in haematopoiesis.
858 citations
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TL;DR: It is confirmed that mPER1 influences rhythmicity primarily through interaction with other clock proteins, while mPER2 positively regulates rhythmic gene expression, and there is partial compensation between products of these two genes.
858 citations
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TL;DR: The evolutionary history of the MYB-bHLH-WD40 protein complex is reviewed and its role in generating plant epidermal cellular diversity is reviewed.
857 citations
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TL;DR: It is proposed that HuR controls translation of a subset of target mRNAs by influencing lincRNA-p21 levels, which in turn derepressed JunB and β-catenin translation and increased the levels of these proteins.
856 citations
Authors
Showing all 19431 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Robert J. Lefkowitz | 214 | 860 | 147995 |
Ronald M. Evans | 199 | 708 | 166722 |
Tony Hunter | 175 | 593 | 124726 |
Marc G. Caron | 173 | 674 | 99802 |
Mark Gerstein | 168 | 751 | 149578 |
Timothy A. Springer | 167 | 669 | 122421 |
Harvey F. Lodish | 165 | 782 | 101124 |
Ira Pastan | 160 | 1286 | 110069 |
Bruce N. Ames | 158 | 506 | 129010 |
Philip Cohen | 154 | 555 | 110856 |
Gerald M. Rubin | 152 | 382 | 115248 |
Ashok Kumar | 151 | 5654 | 164086 |
Kim Nasmyth | 142 | 294 | 59231 |
Kenneth M. Yamada | 139 | 446 | 72136 |
Harold E. Varmus | 137 | 496 | 76320 |