scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Hamburg

EducationHamburg, Germany
About: University of Hamburg is a education organization based out in Hamburg, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Laser. The organization has 45564 authors who have published 89286 publications receiving 2850161 citations. The organization is also known as: Hamburg University.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This analysis revealed that a major Paleolithic population expansion from the "Atlantic zone" (southwestern Europe) occurred 10,000-15,000 years ago, after the Last Glacial Maximum, with haplogroup V, an autochthonous European haplogroups most likely originated in the northern Iberian peninsula or southwestern France at about the time of the Younger Dryas.
Abstract: mtDNA sequence variation was studied in 419 individuals from nine Eurasian populations, by high-resolution RFLP analysis, and it was followed by sequencing of the control region of a subset of these mtDNAs and a detailed survey of previously published data from numerous other European populations. This analysis revealed that a major Paleolithic population expansion from the "Atlantic zone" (southwestern Europe) occurred 10,000-15,000 years ago, after the Last Glacial Maximum. As an mtDNA marker for this expansion we identified haplogroup V, an autochthonous European haplogroup, which most likely originated in the northern Iberian peninsula or southwestern France at about the time of the Younger Dryas. Its sister haplogroup, H, which is distributed throughout the entire range of Caucasoid populations and which originated in the Near East approximately 25,000-30,000 years ago, also took part in this expansion, thus rendering it by far the most frequent (40%-60%) haplogroup in western Europe. Subsequent migrations after the Younger Dryas eventually carried those "Atlantic" mtDNAs into central and northern Europe. This scenario, already implied by archaeological records, is given overwhelming support from both the distribution of the autochthonous European Y chromosome type 15, as detected by the probes 49a/f, and the synthetic maps of nuclear data.

412 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel synapse-associated protein, SAP90, accumulates around the axon hillock of Purkinje cells in rat cerebellum and features suggest a possible role for SAP90 in a guanine nucleotide-mediated signal transduction pathway at a subset of GABAergic synapses in the rat cere bells.

412 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a derivation of an equation for the crystallization pressure based on the chemical potentials of the loaded and the unloaded faces of a growing crystal is provided, which is compared to other equations available in the literature and different approaches are discussed in detail.

412 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, emerging concepts regarding how tRNA abundance is dynamically regulated and how tRNAs (and their nucleolytic fragments) are centrally involved in stress signalling and adaptive translation, operating across a wide range of timescales.
Abstract: tRNAs, nexus molecules between mRNAs and proteins, have a central role in translation. Recent discoveries have revealed unprecedented complexity of tRNA biosynthesis, modification patterns, regulation and function. In this Review, we present emerging concepts regarding how tRNA abundance is dynamically regulated and how tRNAs (and their nucleolytic fragments) are centrally involved in stress signalling and adaptive translation, operating across a wide range of timescales. Mutations in tRNAs or in genes affecting tRNA biogenesis are also linked to complex human diseases with surprising heterogeneity in tissue vulnerability, and we highlight cell-specific aspects that modulate the disease penetrance of tRNA-based pathologies.

412 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In view of the discovery of a new boson by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations at the LHC, this paper presented an update of the global Standard Model (SM) fit to electroweak precision data.
Abstract: In view of the discovery of a new boson by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations at the LHC, we present an update of the global Standard Model (SM) fit to electroweak precision data. Assuming the new particle to be the SM Higgs boson, all fundamental parameters of the SM are known allowing, for the first time, to overconstrain the SM at the electroweak scale and assert its validity. Including the effects of radiative corrections and the experimental and theoretical uncertainties, the global fit exhibits a p-value of 0.07. The mass measurements by ATLAS and CMS agree within 1.3σ with the indirect determination $M_{H}=94^{\,+25}_{\,-22}~\mathrm{GeV}$ . Within the SM the W boson mass and the effective weak mixing angle can be accurately predicted to be M W =80.359±0.011 GeV and $\sin ^{2}\theta ^{\ell }_{{\rm eff}}= 0.23150\pm 0.00010$ from the global fit. These results are compatible with, and exceed in precision, the direct measurements. For the indirect determination of the top quark mass we find $m_{t}= 175.8^{\:+2.7}_{\:-2.4}~ \mathrm {GeV}$ , in agreement with the kinematic and cross-section-based measurements.

412 citations


Authors

Showing all 46072 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Rudolf Jaenisch206606178436
Bruce M. Psaty1811205138244
Stefan Schreiber1781233138528
Chris Sander178713233287
Dennis J. Selkoe177607145825
Daniel R. Weinberger177879128450
Ramachandran S. Vasan1721100138108
Bradley Cox1692150156200
Anders Björklund16576984268
J. S. Lange1602083145919
Hannes Jung1592069125069
Andrew D. Hamilton1511334105439
Jongmin Lee1502257134772
Teresa Lenz1501718114725
Stefanie Dimmeler14757481658
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
161.5K papers, 5.7M citations

97% related

Heidelberg University
119.1K papers, 4.6M citations

97% related

Technische Universität München
123.4K papers, 4M citations

95% related

University of Bern
79.4K papers, 3.1M citations

94% related

University of Zurich
124K papers, 5.3M citations

93% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023282
2022817
20215,784
20205,492
20194,994
20184,587