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Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
62
Citations
20331
World Ranking
10566
National Ranking
4589

Overview

George D. Rose is affiliated with Johns Hopkins University in the United States. Their primary research focus lies in the intersection of biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology, with a detailed emphasis on protein structure and dynamics.

Throughout their career, George D. Rose has contributed to the scientific literature on various topics, including:

  • Protein Structure and Dynamics
  • Enzyme Structure and Function
  • RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
  • Origins and Evolution of Life
  • Advancements in Battery Materials
  • Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
  • Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies

The scientist has published extensively in key subfields such as molecular biology and also contributed to interdisciplinary areas involving electrical and electronic engineering, materials chemistry, astronomy and astrophysics, and food science.

George D. Rose's frequent coauthors include Tatjana Škrbić, Amos Maritan, Achille Giacometti, Jayanth R. Banavar, and Hongyi Zhang. The collaboration with these researchers indicates active engagement in multidisciplinary research networks.

The scholar's work has appeared in several scientific journals, with multiple publications in:

  • Protein Science
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Biochemistry
  • Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics
  • Physical review. E

Notable recent papers by George D. Rose include:

  • "Protein folding - seeing is deceiving" (2021), published in Protein Science
  • "Reframing the Protein Folding Problem: Entropy as Organizer" (2021), published in Biochemistry
  • "From propensities to patterns to principles in protein folding" (2023), published in Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics

In addition to the papers authored by George D. Rose, closely related works in the domain of protein folding and structure have been published collaboratively or by their colleagues, contributing to the understanding of protein folding challenges and structural principles.

Best Publications

  • Turns in peptides and proteins.

    Rose Gd;Gierasch Lm;Smith Ja

  • Hydrophobicity of Amino Acid Residues in Globular Proteins

    George D. Rose;Ari R. Geselowitz;Glenn J. Lesser;Richard H. Lee

  • Helix signals in proteins

    Leonard G. Presta;George D. Rose

  • A molecular mechanism for osmolyte-induced protein stability

    Timothy O. Street;D. Wayne Bolen;George D. Rose

  • Is protein folding hierarchic? I. Local structure and peptide folding

    Robert L. Baldwin;George D. Rose

  • Loops in globular proteins: a novel category of secondary structure

    Jacquelyn F. Leszczynski;George D. Rose

  • Hydrogen bonding in globular proteins.

    Douglas F. Sticke;Leonard G. Presta;Ken A. Dill;George D. Rose

  • IS PROTEIN FOLDING HIERARCHIC? II. FOLDING INTERMEDIATES AND TRANSITION STATES

    Robert L. Baldwin;George D. Rose

  • Hydrogen bonding, hydrophobicity, packing, and protein folding

    George D. Rose;Richard Wolfenden

  • Prediction of chain turns in globular proteins on a hydrophobic basis.

    George D. Rose

  • Side-Chain Entropy Opposes |alpha-Helix Formation but Rationalizes Experimentally Determined Helix-Forming Propensities

    Trevor P Creamer;George D. Rose;George D. Rose

  • Antigenic determinants in proteins coincide with surface regions accessible to large probes (antibody domains)

    Jiri Novotny;Mark Handschumacher;Edgar Haber;Robert E. Bruccoleri

  • LINUS: A HIERARCHIC PROCEDURE TO PREDICT THE FOLD OF A PROTEIN

    Rajgopal Srinivasan;George D. Rose

  • Hierarchic organization of domains in globular proteins

    George D. Rose

  • A physical basis for protein secondary structure

    Rajgopal Srinivasan;George D. Rose

  • α‐Helix‐forming propensities in peptides and proteins

    Trevor P. Creamer;George D. Rose

  • Hydrophobic basis of packing in globular proteins.

    George D. Rose;Siddhartha Roy

  • Hydrophobicity of amino acid subgroups in proteins

    Glenn J. Lesser;George D. Rose

  • Do all backbone polar groups in proteins form hydrogen bonds

    Patrick J. Fleming;George D. Rose

  • Cloning, Expression, and Initial Characterization of a Novel Cytokine-like Gene Family

    Yuan Zhu;Gang Xu;Arun Patel;Megan M. McLaughlin

Frequent Co-Authors

Peter R. Young
Peter R. Young GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)
Robert L. Baldwin
Robert L. Baldwin Stanford University
John A. Smith
John A. Smith University of Alabama at Birmingham
Neville R. Kallenbach
Neville R. Kallenbach New York University
Lila M. Gierasch
Lila M. Gierasch University of Massachusetts Amherst
Teresa M. Przytycka
Teresa M. Przytycka National Institutes of Health
Carl Frieden
Carl Frieden Washington University in St. Louis
Nancy Kopell
Nancy Kopell Boston University
Sabita Roy
Sabita Roy University of Miami

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