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Institution

University of Marburg

EducationMarburg, Germany
About: University of Marburg is a education organization based out in Marburg, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Virus. The organization has 23195 authors who have published 42907 publications receiving 1506069 citations. The organization is also known as: Philipps University of Marburg & Philipps-Universität.
Topics: Population, Virus, Gene, Exciton, Photoluminescence


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Transforming growth factor-beta 2- and 3-immunoreactive neurons were localized in brain regions that have been shown to contain neurons synthesizing and/or storing basic fibroblast growth factor suggesting possible opposing or synergistic effects of these peptide growth factors.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study shows that the degree of metabolic suppression during hypothermia can alternatively be explained by active downregulation of metabolic rate and thermoregulatory control of heat production.
Abstract: During daily torpor and hibernation metabolic rate is reduced to a fraction of the euthermic metabolic rate. This reduction is commonly explained by temperature effects on biochemical reactions, as described by Q10 effects or Arrhenius plots. This study shows that the degree of metabolic suppression during hypothermia can alternatively be explained by active downregulation of metabolic rate and thermoregulatory control of heat production. Heat regulation is fully adequate to predict changes in metabolic rate, and Q10 effects are not required to explain the reduction of energy requirements during hibernation and torpor.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Mar 2001-Science
TL;DR: To study the mechanisms underlying the high pathogenicity of Ebola virus, a system that allows the recovery of infectious virus from cloned cDNA and thus permits genetic manipulation is established and a mutant in which the editing site of the gene encoding envelope glycoprotein (GP) was eliminated.
Abstract: To study the mechanisms underlying the high pathogenicity of Ebola virus, we have established a system that allows the recovery of infectious virus from cloned cDNA and thus permits genetic manipulation. We created a mutant in which the editing site of the gene encoding envelope glycoprotein (GP) was eliminated. This mutant no longer expressed the nonstructural glycoprotein sGP. Synthesis of GP increased, but most of it accumulated in the endoplasmic reticulum as immature precursor. The mutant was significantly more cytotoxic than wild-type virus, indicating that cytotoxicity caused by GP is down-regulated by the virus through transcriptional RNA editing and expression of sGP.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results question the popular view of a driving role of frontal areas in the initiation of perceptual alternations during binocular rivalry and conclude that frontal areas are associated with active report and introspection rather than with rivalry per se.
Abstract: When two dissimilar stimuli are presented to the eyes, perception alternates between multiple interpretations, a phenomenon dubbed binocular rivalry. Numerous recent imaging studies have attempted to unveil neural substrates underlying multistable perception. However, these studies had a conceptual constraint: access to observers' perceptual state relied on their introspection and active report. Here, we investigated to what extent neural correlates of binocular rivalry in healthy humans are confounded by this subjective measure and by action. We used the optokinetic nystagmus and pupil size to objectively and continuously map perceptual alternations for binocular-rivalry stimuli. Combining these two measures with fMRI allowed us to assess the neural correlates of binocular rivalry time locked to the perceptual alternations in the absence of active report. When observers were asked to actively report their percept, our objective measures matched the report. In this active condition, objective measures and subjective reporting revealed that occipital, parietal, and frontal areas underlie the processing of binocular rivalry, replicating earlier findings. Furthermore, objective measures provided additional statistical power due to their continuous nature. Importantly, when observers passively experienced rivalry without reporting perceptual alternations, a different picture emerged: differential neural activity in frontal areas was absent, whereas activation in occipital and parietal regions persisted. Our results question the popular view of a driving role of frontal areas in the initiation of perceptual alternations during binocular rivalry. Instead, we conclude that frontal areas are associated with active report and introspection rather than with rivalry per se.

298 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proteome of growing cells of Bacillus subtilis was analyzed and a reasonable correlation was found for the majority of protein spots, and the vegetative proteome containing 876 proteins in total is now ready for physiological applications.
Abstract: The proteome of growing cells of Bacillus subtilis was analyzed in order to provide the basis for its application in microbial physiology. DNA arrays were used to calculate the number of genes transcribed in growing cells. From the 4100 B. subtilis genes, 2515 were actively transcribed in cells grown under standard conditions. From these genes 1544 proteins should be covered by our standard gel system pI 4-7. Using this standard gel system and supplementary zoom gels (pI 5.5-6.7, 5-6, 4.5-5.5, and 4-5) 693 proteins which are expressed in growing cells were detected that cover more than 40% of the vegetative proteome predicted for this region. Particularly broad coverage and thus comprehensive monitoring will be possible for central carbohydrate metabolism (glycolysis, pentose phosphate shunt, and citric acid cycle), amino acid synthesis pathways, purine and pyrimidine metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, and main cellular functions like replication, transcription, translation, and cell wall synthesis. Comparing the theoretical pI and Mr values with those experimentally determined a reasonable correlation was found for the majority of protein spots. By a color code outliers with dramatic deviations in charge or mass were visualized that may indicate post-translational modifications. In addition to the cytosolic neutral and alkaline proteins, 130 membrane proteins were found relying on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) separation in combination with electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS) techniques. The vegetative proteome containing 876 proteins in total is now ready for physiological applications. Two main proteome fractions (pI 4-7 and zoom gel pI 4.5-5.5) should be sufficient for such high-throughput physiological proteomics.

298 citations


Authors

Showing all 23488 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John C. Morris1831441168413
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Martin J. Blaser147820104104
Christopher T. Walsh13981974314
Markus Cristinziani131114084538
James C. Paulson12644352152
Markus F. Neurath12493462376
Nicholas W. Wood12361466270
Florian Lang116142166496
Howard I. Maibach116182160765
Thomas G. Ksiazek11339846108
Frank Glorius11366349305
Eberhard Ritz111110961530
Manfred T. Reetz11095942941
Wolfgang H. Oertel11065351147
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023142
2022412
20212,103
20201,918
20191,749
20181,592