Institution
University of Geneva
Education•Geneva, Switzerland•
About: University of Geneva is a education organization based out in Geneva, Switzerland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 26887 authors who have published 65265 publications receiving 2931373 citations. The organization is also known as: Geneva University & Universite de Geneve.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Planet, Stars, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is concluded that alpha-bungarotoxin binding proteins in the vertebrate nervous system can function as nAChRs.
926 citations
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TL;DR: A combination of biochemistry in animal cell-free systems and genetics in yeast is revealing the molecular machinery of the secretory pathway of eukaryotes.
Abstract: A combination of biochemistry in animal cell-free systems and genetics in yeast is revealing the molecular machinery of the secretory pathway of eukaryotes. Transporting vesicles have a simple coat structure and employ a general mechanism for fusion that is conserved in evolution.
926 citations
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TL;DR: Observations of the transiting planet GJ’1214b are reported, finding that the planetary mass and radius are consistent with a composition of primarily water enshrouded by a hydrogen–helium envelope that is only 0.05% of the mass of the planet.
Abstract: A decade ago, the detection of the first transiting extrasolar planet provided a direct constraint on its composition and opened the door to spectroscopic investigations of extrasolar planetary atmospheres. Because such characterization studies are feasible only for transiting systems that are both nearby and for which the planet-to-star radius ratio is relatively large, nearby small stars have been surveyed intensively. Doppler studies and microlensing have uncovered a population of planets with minimum masses of 1.9-10 times the Earth's mass (M[symbol:see text]), called super-Earths. The first constraint on the bulk composition of this novel class of planets was afforded by CoRoT-7b (refs 8, 9), but the distance and size of its star preclude atmospheric studies in the foreseeable future. Here we report observations of the transiting planet GJ 1214b, which has a mass of 6.55M[symbol:see text]), and a radius 2.68 times Earth's radius (R[symbol:see text]), indicating that it is intermediate in stature between Earth and the ice giants of the Solar System. We find that the planetary mass and radius are consistent with a composition of primarily water enshrouded by a hydrogen-helium envelope that is only 0.05% of the mass of the planet. The atmosphere is probably escaping hydrodynamically, indicating that it has undergone significant evolution during its history. The star is small and only 13 parsecs away, so the planetary atmosphere is amenable to study with current observatories.
924 citations
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TL;DR: The advantages of being able to predict the position of a protein of known structure within a two‐dimensional gel are shown.
Abstract: The focusing positions in narrow range immobilized pH gradients of 29 polypeptides of known amino acid sequence were determined under denaturing conditions. The isoelectric points of the proteins calculated from their amino acid sequences matched with good accuracy the experimentally determined pI values. We show the advantages of being able to predict the position of a protein of known structure within a two-dimensional gel.
922 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, practical and numerical information for undertaking and evaluating absolute structure and configuration determinations is provided for macromolecular structures, the dangers of polar-dispersion errors, Euclidean normalizers of space groups, detection and reporting of molecular symmetry, enantiopurity and optical activity in solution.
Abstract: Detailed practical and numerical information is provided for undertaking and evaluating absolute-structure and absolute-configuration determinations. The interpretation of numerical values of x, the Flack [Acta Cryst. (1983), A39, 876–881] parameter, and its standard uncertainty u are explained in terms of the inversion-distinguishing power. Moreover, the conditions to obtain reliable values of x(u) are detailed. Further explanatory material is provided on the use of right-handed axes, valid intensity data, the application to macromolecular structures, the dangers of polar-dispersion errors, Euclidean normalizers of space groups, the detection and reporting of molecular symmetry, enantiopurity and optical activity in solution. New CIF data names are introduced.
921 citations
Authors
Showing all 27203 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
JoAnn E. Manson | 270 | 1819 | 258509 |
Joseph L. Goldstein | 207 | 556 | 149527 |
Kari Stefansson | 206 | 794 | 174819 |
David Baltimore | 203 | 876 | 162955 |
Mark I. McCarthy | 200 | 1028 | 187898 |
Michael S. Brown | 185 | 422 | 123723 |
Yang Gao | 168 | 2047 | 146301 |
Napoleone Ferrara | 167 | 494 | 140647 |
Marc Weber | 167 | 2716 | 153502 |
Alessandro Melchiorri | 151 | 674 | 116384 |
Andrew D. Hamilton | 151 | 1334 | 105439 |
David P. Strachan | 143 | 472 | 105256 |
Andrew Beretvas | 141 | 1985 | 110059 |
Rainer Wallny | 141 | 1661 | 105387 |
Josh Moss | 139 | 1019 | 89255 |