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Institution

University of Iceland

EducationReykjavik, Suðurnes, Iceland
About: University of Iceland is a education organization based out in Reykjavik, Suðurnes, Iceland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Genome-wide association study. The organization has 5423 authors who have published 16199 publications receiving 694762 citations. The organization is also known as: Háskóli Íslands.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work reports the results of a genome-wide screen of Icelandic families representing 343 affected women and detects a significant locus on 2p13 with a lod score of 4.70, the first reported locus for pre-eclampsia meeting the criteria for genome- wide significance.
Abstract: Pre-eclampsia is a common and serious disease and a major cause of maternal and infant mortality. Antenatal care systems world-wide screen for signs of the disease such as hypertension and proteinuria. Unlike most other human disorders it impacts two individuals, the mother and the child, both of whom can be severely affected. The pathophysiology of the disorder is incompletely understood, but familial clustering of the disease is apparent. Here we report the results of a genome-wide screen of Icelandic families representing 343 affected women. Including those patients with non-proteinuric pre-eclampsia (gestational hypertension), proteinuric pre-eclampsia and eclampsia, we detected a significant locus on 2p13 with a lod score of 4.70 (single point P < 3.49 x 10(-6)). This is the first reported locus for pre-eclampsia meeting the criteria for genome-wide significance.

204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proteolytic activity of four hemorrhagic metalloproteinases isolated from the venom of the Western diamondback rattlesnake was investigated using isolated extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins, and several of the ECM proteins are efficiently digested by these toxins.

204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The consistency of three approaches in estimating warming effects on plant community composition are assessed, supporting the view that inferences based on space-for-time substitution overestimate the magnitude of responses to contemporary climate warming because spatial gradients reflect long-term processes.
Abstract: Inference about future climate change impacts typically relies on one of three approaches: manipulative experiments, historical comparisons (broadly defined to include monitoring the response to ambient climate fluctuations using repeat sampling of plots, dendroecology, and paleoecology techniques), and space-for-time substitutions derived from sampling along environmental gradients. Potential limitations of all three approaches are recognized. Here we address the congruence among these three main approaches by comparing the degree to which tundra plant community composition changes (i) in response to in situ experimental warming, (ii) with interannual variability in summer temperature within sites, and (iii) over spatial gradients in summer temperature. We analyzed changes in plant community composition from repeat sampling (85 plant communities in 28 regions) and experimental warming studies (28 experiments in 14 regions) throughout arctic and alpine North America and Europe. Increases in the relative abundance of species with a warmer thermal niche were observed in response to warmer summer temperatures using all three methods; however, effect sizes were greater over broad-scale spatial gradients relative to either temporal variability in summer temperature within a site or summer temperature increases induced by experimental warming. The effect sizes for change over time within a site and with experimental warming were nearly identical. These results support the view that inferences based on space-for-time substitution overestimate the magnitude of responses to contemporary climate warming, because spatial gradients reflect long-term processes. In contrast, in situ experimental warming and monitoring approaches yield consistent estimates of the magnitude of response of plant communities to climate warming.

204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Marco Ajello1, Andrea Albert2, Brandon Anderson3, Luca Baldini2, Guido Barbiellini4, Denis Bastieri4, Ronaldo Bellazzini4, Elisabetta Bissaldi4, Roger Blandford2, Elliott D. Bloom2, R. Bonino4, Eugenio Bottacini2, J. Bregeon, P. Bruel, R. Buehler, G. A. Caliandro2, R. A. Cameron2, M. Caragiulo4, P. A. Caraveo5, C. Cecchi4, A. Chekhtman6, Stefano Ciprini4, Johann Cohen-Tanugi, Jan Conrad3, F. Costanza4, F. D'Ammando5, A. De Angelis4, F. de Palma4, R. Desiante4, M. Di Mauro2, L. Di Venere4, Aaron Dominguez1, Persis S. Drell2, C. Favuzzi4, W. B. Focke2, A. Franckowiak2, Yasushi Fukazawa7, Stefan Funk, P. Fusco4, F. Gargano4, Dario Gasparrini4, Nicola Giglietto4, T. Glanzman2, G. Godfrey2, Sylvain Guiriec8, D. Horan, Gudlaugur Johannesson9, M. Katsuragawa10, S. Kensei7, M. Kuss4, Stefan Larsson3, Luca Latronico4, Jingcheng Li11, L. Li3, Francesco Longo4, F. Loparco4, P. Lubrano4, G. M. Madejski2, S. Maldera4, Alberto Manfreda4, M. Mayer, M. N. Mazziotta4, Manuel Meyer3, Peter F. Michelson2, Nestor Mirabal8, Tsunefumi Mizuno7, M. E. Monzani2, A. Morselli4, Igor V. Moskalenko2, S. Murgia12, M. Negro4, E. Nuss, C. Okada7, E. Orlando2, J. F. Ormes13, David Paneque2, J. S. Perkins8, Melissa Pesce-Rollins2, F. Piron, G. Pivato4, T. A. Porter2, S. Rainò4, R. Rando4, M. Razzano4, A. Reimer2, Miguel A. Sánchez-Conde3, Carmelo Sgrò4, D. Simone4, E. J. Siskind, F. Spada4, Gloria Spandre4, P. Spinelli4, Hiromitsu Takahashi7, J. B. Thayer2, Diego F. Torres11, G. Tosti4, Eleonora Troja8, Yasunobu Uchiyama, K. S. Wood6, Matthew Wood2, Gabrijela Zaharijas4, Stephan Zimmer3 
TL;DR: The search for spectral irregularities induced by oscillations between photons and axionlike-particles in the γ-ray spectrum of NGC 1275, the central galaxy of the Perseus cluster, is reported on.
Abstract: We report on the search for spectral irregularities induced by oscillations between photons and axion-like particles (ALPs) in the gamma-ray spectrum of NGC 1275, the central galaxy of the Perseus cluster. Using 6 years of Fermi Large Area Telescope data, we find no evidence for ALPs and exclude couplings above 5 times 10 (sup -12) per gigaelectronvolt for ALP masses less than or approximately equal to 0.5 apparent magnitude (m (sub a)) less than or approximately equal to 5 nanoelectronvolts at 95 percent confidence. The limits are competitive withthe sensitivity of planned laboratory experiments, and, together with other bounds, strongly constrain thepossibility that ALPs can reduce the gamma-ray opacity of the Universe.

203 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The models accurately predict growth phenotypes and known auxotrophies in CHO cells and show that the metabolic resources in CHO are more than three times more efficiently utilized for growth or recombinant protein synthesis following targeted efforts to engineer the CHO secretory pathway.
Abstract: Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells dominate biotherapeutic protein production and are widely used in mammalian cell line engineering research. To elucidate metabolic bottlenecks in protein production and to guide cell engineering and bioprocess optimization, we reconstructed the metabolic pathways in CHO and associated them with >1,700 genes in the Cricetulus griseus genome. The genome-scale metabolic model based on this reconstruction, iCHO1766, and cell-line-specific models for CHO-K1, CHO-S, and CHO-DG44 cells provide the biochemical basis of growth and recombinant protein production. The models accurately predict growth phenotypes and known auxotrophies in CHO cells. With the models, we quantify the protein synthesis capacity of CHO cells and demonstrate that common bioprocess treatments, such as histone deacetylase inhibitors, inefficiently increase product yield. However, our simulations show that the metabolic resources in CHO are more than three times more efficiently utilized for growth or recombinant protein synthesis following targeted efforts to engineer the CHO secretory pathway. This model will further accelerate CHO cell engineering and help optimize bioprocesses.

203 citations


Authors

Showing all 5561 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Albert Hofman2672530321405
Kari Stefansson206794174819
Ronald Klein1941305149140
Eric Boerwinkle1831321170971
Unnur Thorsteinsdottir167444121009
Vilmundur Gudnason159837123802
Hakon Hakonarson152968101604
Bernhard O. Palsson14783185051
Andrew T. Hattersley146768106949
Fernando Rivadeneira14662886582
Rattan Lal140138387691
Jonathan G. Seidman13756389782
Christine E. Seidman13451967895
Augustine Kong13423789818
Timothy M. Frayling133500100344
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202377
2022209
20211,222
20201,118
20191,140
20181,070