Institution
Uppsala University
Education•Uppsala, Sweden•
About: Uppsala University is a education organization based out in Uppsala, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 36485 authors who have published 107509 publications receiving 4220668 citations. The organization is also known as: Uppsala universitet & uu.se.
Topics: Population, Gene, Context (language use), Thin film, Receptor
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a perspective on an underlying practical challenge: designing communities that balance settlement density with satisfactory access to nature experience is presented. But, the authors do not consider how people actually achieve restoration in urban and natural environments.
Abstract: Urbanicity presents a challenge for the pursuit of sustainability. High settlement density may offer some environmental, economic, and social advantages, but it can impose psychological demands that people find excessive. These demands of urban life have stimulated a desire for contact with nature through suburban residence, leading to planning and transportation practices that have profound implications for the pursuit of sustainability. Some might dismiss people's desire for contact with nature as the result of an anti-urban bias in conjunction with a romantic view of nature. However, research in environmental psychology suggests that people's desire for contact with nature serves an important adaptive function, namely, psychological restoration. Based on this insight, we offer a perspective on an underlying practical challenge: designing communities that balance settlement density with satisfactory access to nature experience. We discuss research on four issues: how people tend to believe that nature is restorative; how restoration needs and beliefs shape environmental preferences; how well people actually achieve restoration in urban and natural environments; and how contact with nature can promote health. In closing, we consider urban nature as a design option that promotes urban sustainability.
659 citations
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TL;DR: The crystal structure of the double-stranded DNA bacteriophage HK97 mature empty capsid was determined at 3.6 angstrom resolution, creating protein chainmail: topologically linked protein catenanes arranged with icosahedral symmetry.
Abstract: The crystal structure of the double-stranded DNA bacteriophage HK97 mature empty capsid was determined at 3.6 angstrom resolution. The 660 angstrom diameter icosahedral particle contains 420 subunits with a new fold. The final capsid maturation step is an autocatalytic reaction that creates 420 isopeptide bonds between proteins. Each subunit is joined to two of its neighbors by ligation of the side-chain lysine 169 to asparagine 356. This generates 12 pentameric and 60 hexameric rings of covalently joined subunits that loop through each other, creating protein chainmail: topologically linked protein catenanes arranged with icosahedral symmetry. Catenanes have not been previously observed in proteins and provide a stabilization mechanism for the very thin HK97 capsid.
658 citations
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TL;DR: It is proposed that reversible association of actin with profilin in the cell may provide a mechanism for storage of monomeric actin and controlled turnover of microfilaments.
655 citations
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TL;DR: Two nonsynonymous SNPs in exon 1 of the gene LOXL1 explain the association with glaucoma, and the data suggest that they confer risk of XFG mainly through exfoliation syndrome (XFS).
Abstract: Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness A genome-wide search yielded multiple single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the 15q241 region associated with glaucoma Further investigation revealed that the association is confined to exfoliation glaucoma (XFG) Two nonsynonymous SNPs in exon 1 of the gene LOXL1 explain the association, and the data suggest that they confer risk of XFG mainly through exfoliation syndrome (XFS) About 25% of the general population is homozygous for the highest-risk haplotype, and their risk of suffering from XFG is more than 100 times that of individuals carrying only low-risk haplotypes The population-attributable risk is more than 99% The product of LOXL1 catalyzes the formation of elastin fibers found to be a major component of the lesions in XFG
654 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a simple technique is presented to obtain the characteristic microhardness values of surface coatings that are too thin for the values to be directly measured, using a physical model of film deformation during indentation.
654 citations
Authors
Showing all 36854 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Zhong Lin Wang | 245 | 2529 | 259003 |
Lewis C. Cantley | 196 | 748 | 169037 |
Darien Wood | 160 | 2174 | 136596 |
Kaj Blennow | 160 | 1845 | 116237 |
Christopher J. O'Donnell | 159 | 869 | 126278 |
Tomas Hökfelt | 158 | 1033 | 95979 |
Peter G. Schultz | 156 | 893 | 89716 |
Frederik Barkhof | 154 | 1449 | 104982 |
Deepak L. Bhatt | 149 | 1973 | 114652 |
Svante Pääbo | 147 | 407 | 84489 |
Jan-Åke Gustafsson | 147 | 1058 | 98804 |
Hans-Olov Adami | 145 | 908 | 83473 |
Hermann Kolanoski | 145 | 1279 | 96152 |
Kjell Fuxe | 142 | 1479 | 89846 |
Jan Conrad | 141 | 826 | 71445 |