Institution
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
Nonprofit•Melbourne, Victoria, Australia•
About: Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research is a nonprofit organization based out in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Antigen & Immune system. The organization has 5012 authors who have published 10620 publications receiving 873561 citations.
Topics: Antigen, Immune system, Population, T cell, Plasmodium falciparum
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: Many methods and tools are available for preprocessing high-throughput RNA sequencing data and detecting differential expression and in doing so improving the quality of results and reducing the number of errors.
Abstract: Many methods and tools are available for preprocessing high-throughput RNA sequencing data and detecting differential expression.
731 citations
••
TL;DR: LimmaGUI as mentioned in this paper is a graphical user interface (GUI) based on R-Tcl/Tk for the exploration and linear modeling of data from two-color spotted microarray experiments, especially the assessment of differential expression in complex experiments.
Abstract: Summary:limmaGUI is a graphical user interface (GUI) based on R-Tcl/Tk for the exploration and linear modeling of data from two-color spotted microarray experiments, especially the assessment of differential expression in complex experiments. limmaGUI provides an interface to the statistical methods of the limma package for R, and is itself implemented as an R package. The software provides point and click access to a range of methods for background correction, graphical display, normalization, and analysis of microarray data. Arbitrarily complex microarray experiments involving multiple RNA sources can be accomodated using linear models and contrasts. Empirical Bayes shrinkage of the gene-wise residual variances is provided to ensure stable results even when the number of arrays is small. Integrated support is provided for quantitative spot quality weights, control spots, within-array replicate spots and multiple testing. limmaGUI is available for most platforms on the which R runs including Windows, Mac and most flavors of Unix.
Availability: http://bioinf.wehi.edu.au/limmaGUI
727 citations
••
TL;DR: After skin infection with herpes simplex virus, cytotoxic T lymphocyte activation required MHC class I-restricted presentation by nonmigratory CD8(+) DCs rather than skin-derived DCs, which supports the argument for initial transport of antigen by migratingDCs, followed by its transfer to the lymphoid-resident DCs for presentation and CTL priming.
724 citations
••
Tarjei S. Mikkelsen1, Tarjei S. Mikkelsen2, Matthew Wakefield3, Bronwen Aken4 +235 more•Institutions (21)
TL;DR: A high-quality draft of the genome sequence of the grey, short-tailed opossum is reported, indicating a strong influence of biased gene conversion on nucleotide sequence composition, and a relationship between chromosomal characteristics and X chromosome inactivation.
Abstract: We report a high-quality draft of the genome sequence of the grey, short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica). As the first metatherian ('marsupial') species to be sequenced, the opossum provides a unique perspective on the organization and evolution of mammalian genomes. Distinctive features of the opossum chromosomes provide support for recent theories about genome evolution and function, including a strong influence of biased gene conversion on nucleotide sequence composition, and a relationship between chromosomal characteristics and X chromosome inactivation. Comparison of opossum and eutherian genomes also reveals a sharp difference in evolutionary innovation between protein-coding and non-coding functional elements. True innovation in protein-coding genes seems to be relatively rare, with lineage-specific differences being largely due to diversification and rapid turnover in gene families involved in environmental interactions. In contrast, about 20% of eutherian conserved non-coding elements (CNEs) are recent inventions that postdate the divergence of Eutheria and Metatheria. A substantial proportion of these eutherian-specific CNEs arose from sequence inserted by transposable elements, pointing to transposons as a major creative force in the evolution of mammalian gene regulation.
724 citations
••
TL;DR: Two cDNA clones encoding a receptor for human granulocyte‐macrophage colony‐stimulating factor were isolated by expression screening of a library made from human placental mRNA and cross‐linking experiments revealed a similar size for the glycosylated receptors in transfected COS and haemopoietic cells.
Abstract: Two cDNA clones encoding a receptor for human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF-R) were isolated by expression screening of a library made from human placental mRNA. Pools of recombinant plasmid DNA were electroporated into COS cells which were then screened for their capacity to bind radioiodinated hGM-CSF using a sensitive microscopic autoradiographic approach. The cloned GM-CSF-R precursor is a 400 amino acid polypeptide (Mr 45,000) with a single transmembrane domain, a glycosylated extracellular domain and a short (54 amino acids) intracytoplasmic tail. It does not contain a tyrosine kinase domain nor show homology with members of the immunoglobulin super gene family, but does show some significant sequence homologies with receptors for several other haemopoietic growth factors, including those for interleukin-6, erythropoietin and interleukin-2 (beta-chain) and also to the prolactin receptor. When transfected into COS cells the cloned cDNA directed the expression of a GM-CSF-R showing a single class of affinity (KD = 2(-8) nM) and specificity for human GM-CSF but not interleukin-3. Messenger RNA coding for this receptor was detected in a variety of haemopoietic cells known to display hGM-CSF binding, and cross-linking experiments revealed a similar size for the glycosylated receptors in transfected COS and haemopoietic cells.
719 citations
Authors
Showing all 5041 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Martin White | 196 | 2038 | 232387 |
Stuart H. Orkin | 186 | 715 | 112182 |
Tien Yin Wong | 160 | 1880 | 131830 |
Mark J. Smyth | 153 | 713 | 88783 |
Anne B. Newman | 150 | 902 | 99255 |
James P. Allison | 137 | 483 | 83336 |
Scott W. Lowe | 134 | 396 | 89376 |
Rajkumar Buyya | 133 | 1066 | 95164 |
Peter Hall | 132 | 1640 | 85019 |
Ralph L. Brinster | 131 | 382 | 56455 |
Nico van Rooijen | 130 | 513 | 62623 |
David A. Hafler | 128 | 558 | 64314 |
Andreas Strasser | 128 | 509 | 66903 |
Marc Feldmann | 125 | 663 | 64916 |
Herman Waldmann | 118 | 586 | 49942 |