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Institution

University of Zurich

EducationZurich, Switzerland
About: University of Zurich is a education organization based out in Zurich, Switzerland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Transplantation. The organization has 50842 authors who have published 124042 publications receiving 5304521 citations. The organization is also known as: UZH & Uni Zurich.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In healthy human volunteers, the psychotomimetic effects of psilocybin were blocked dose-dependently by the serotonin-2A antagonist ketanserin or the atypical antipsychotics risperidone, but were increased by the dopamine antagonist and typical antipsychotic haloperidol.
Abstract: Psilocybin, an indoleamine hallucinogen, produces a psychosis-like syndrome in humans that resembles first episodes of schizophrenia. In healthy human volunteers, the psychotomimetic effects of psilocybin were blocked dose-dependently by the serotonin-2A antagonist ketanserin or the atypical antipsychotic risperidone, but were increased by the dopamine antagonist and typical antipsychotic haloperidol. These data are consistent with animal studies and provide the first evidence in humans that psilocybin-induced psychosis is due to serotonin-2A receptor activation, independently of dopamine stimulation. Thus, serotonin-2A overactivity may be involved in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and serotonin-2A antagonism may contribute to therapeutic effects of antipsychotics. Language: en

717 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results reveal a mechanism by which plants determine the composition of rhizosphere microbiota, plant performance and plant-herbivore interactions of the next generation by modifying root-associated microbiota.
Abstract: By changing soil properties, plants can modify their growth environment. Although the soil microbiota is known to play a key role in the resulting plant-soil feedbacks, the proximal mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unknown. We found that benzoxazinoids, a class of defensive secondary metabolites that are released by roots of cereals such as wheat and maize, alter root-associated fungal and bacterial communities, decrease plant growth, increase jasmonate signaling and plant defenses, and suppress herbivore performance in the next plant generation. Complementation experiments demonstrate that the benzoxazinoid breakdown product 6-methoxy-benzoxazolin-2-one (MBOA), which accumulates in the soil during the conditioning phase, is both sufficient and necessary to trigger the observed phenotypic changes. Sterilization, fungal and bacterial profiling and complementation experiments reveal that MBOA acts indirectly by altering root-associated microbiota. Our results reveal a mechanism by which plants determine the composition of rhizosphere microbiota, plant performance and plant-herbivore interactions of the next generation.

716 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The evolution of ankyrin repeat (AR) proteins in vitro for specific, high-affinity target binding and combinatorial libraries of AR proteins of varying repeat numbers with diversified binding surfaces are generated, an attractive alternative to antibody libraries.
Abstract: We report here the evolution of ankyrin repeat (AR) proteins in vitro for specific, high-affinity target binding. Using a consensus design strategy, we generated combinatorial libraries of AR proteins of varying repeat numbers with diversified binding surfaces. Libraries of two and three repeats, flanked by 'capping repeats,' were used in ribosome-display selections against maltose binding protein (MBP) and two eukaryotic kinases. We rapidly enriched target-specific binders with affinities in the low nanomolar range and determined the crystal structure of one of the selected AR proteins in complex with MBP at 2.3 A resolution. The interaction relies on the randomized positions of the designed AR protein and is comparable to natural, heterodimeric protein-protein interactions. Thus, our AR protein libraries are valuable sources for binding molecules and, because of the very favorable biophysical properties of the designed AR proteins, an attractive alternative to antibody libraries.

714 citations

Book
12 Nov 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors transformed strongly elliptic boundary value problems of second order in domains \( \Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^3\) into boundary integral equations.
Abstract: In Chap. 3 we transformed strongly elliptic boundary value problems of second order in domains \( \Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^3\) into boundary integral equations. These integral equations were formulated as variational problems on a Hilbert space H:

713 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 1. Hazelrigg, T. H., Bartsch, D. & Kandel, E. R.
Abstract: 1. Hazelrigg, T. Cell 95, 451–460 (1998). 2. Tiedge, H., Bloom, F. E. & Richter, D. Science 283, 186–187 (1999). 3. Huang, E. P. Curr. Biol. 9, R168–R170 (1999). 4. Gao, F. B. Bioessays 20, 7–78 (1998). 5. Kuhl, D. & Skehel, P. Curr. Opin. Neurobiol. 8, 600–606 (1998). 6. Palade, G. Science 189, 347–358 (1975). 7. Spacek, J. & Harris, K. M. J. Neurosci 17, 190–203 (1997). 8. Berridge, M. J. Neuron 21, 13–26 (1998). 9. Matlack, K. E. S., Mothes, W. & Rapoport, T. A. Cell 92, 381–390 (1998). 10. Gorlich, D. & Rapoport, T. A. Cell 75, 615–630 (1993). 11. Bailey, C. H., Bartsch, D. & Kandel, E. R. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 13445–13452 (1996). 12. Schuman, E. M. Neuron 18, 339–342 (1997). 13. Pelham, H. R. Trends. Biochem. Sci. 15, 483–486 (1990). 14. Lledo, P.M., Zhang, X., Sudhof, T. C., Malenka, R. C. & Nicoll, R. A. Science 279, 399–403 (1998). 15. Chan, J., Aoki, C. & Pickel, V. M. J. Neurosci. Methods 33, 113–127 (1990). brief communications

713 citations


Authors

Showing all 51384 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard A. Flavell2311328205119
Peer Bork206697245427
Thomas C. Südhof191653118007
Stuart H. Orkin186715112182
Ruedi Aebersold182879141881
Tadamitsu Kishimoto1811067130860
Stanley B. Prusiner16874597528
Yang Yang1642704144071
Tomas Hökfelt158103395979
Dan R. Littman157426107164
Hans Lassmann15572479933
Matthias Egger152901184176
Lorenzo Bianchini1521516106970
Robert M. Strieter15161273040
Ashok Kumar1515654164086
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023265
20221,039
20218,997
20208,398
20197,336
20186,832