World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Genetics

D-Index
61
Citations
11332
World Ranking
3079
National Ranking
382

Overview

Johannes Wienberg is affiliated with the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily focuses on the fields of Biochemistry, Genetics, and Molecular Biology, with particular emphasis on Cell Biology and Molecular Biology as subfields.

Their work covers key topics including:

  • Cellular transport and secretion
  • Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research
  • Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease

Wienberg has contributed to several recent publications, among which are:

  • "GOLPH3 and GOLPH3L maintain Golgi localization of LYSET and a functional mannose 6-phosphate transport pathway" (2024), published in The EMBO Journal
  • "Equipositioning of Chromosomes in the Polyploid Archaeon Haloferax volcanii by HpaAB" (2025), published in bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

The scientist frequently collaborates with several other researchers, including Brooke L. Brauer, Zilei Chen, Felix Beirow, Jiaran Li, and Daniel Meisinger.

The main venues where Johannes Wienberg's work appears are:

  • The EMBO Journal
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Best Publications

  • Multicolor Spectral Karyotyping of Human Chromosomes

    E. Schröck;S. du Manoir;T. Veldman;B. Schoell

  • The Promise of Comparative Genomics in Mammals

    Stephen J. O'Brien;Marilyn Menotti-Raymond;William J. Murphy;William G. Nash

  • Multicolour spectral karyotyping of mouse chromosomes.

    M Liyanage;A Coleman;S du Manoir;T Veldman

  • Reconstruction of genomic rearrangements in great apes and gibbons by chromosome painting.

    Anna Jauch;Johannes Wienberg;Roscoe Stanyon;N. Arnold

  • Male mouse recombination maps for each autosome identified by chromosome painting.

    Lutz Froenicke;Lorinda K. Anderson;Johannes Wienberg;Terry Ashley

  • Molecular cytotaxonomy of primates by chromosomal in situ suppression hybridization

    Johannes Wienberg;Anna Jauch;Roscoe Stanyon;Thomas Cremer

  • Homologies in human and Macaca fuscata chromosomes revealed by in situ suppression hybridization with human chromosome specific DNA libraries.

    Johannes Wienberg;Roscoe Stanyon;Anna Jauch;Thomas Cremer

  • Chromosome Painting: A Useful Art

    Thomas Ried;Evelin Schröck;Yi Ning;Johannes Wienberg

  • Chromosomal phylogeny and evolution of gibbons (Hylobatidae)

    Stefan Müller;Melanie Hollatz;Johannes Wienberg

  • Chinese hamster genome sequenced from sorted chromosomes.

    Karina Brinkrolf;Oliver Rupp;Holger Laux;Florian Kollin

  • Comparative genomics: lessons from cats

    Stephen J. O'Brien;Johannes Wienberg;Leslie A. Lyons

  • Defining the ancestral karyotype of all primates by multidirectional chromosome painting between tree shrews, lemurs and humans.

    S. Müller;R. Stanyon;P. C. M. O’Brien;M. A. Ferguson-Smith

  • Cross-species colour segmenting: a novel tool in human karyotype analysis.

    S. Müller;P. C. M. O'Brien;M. A. Ferguson‐Smith;J. Wienberg

  • The atomic force microscope as a new microdissecting tool for the generation of genetic probes.

    S. Thalhammer;R.W. Stark;S. Müller;J. Wienberg

  • Comparative painting of mammalian chromosomes

    Johannes Wienberg;Roscoe Stanyon

  • Conservation of human vs. feline genome organization revealed by reciprocal chromosome painting.

    J. Wienberg;R. Stanyon;W.G. Nash;P.C.M. O’Brien

  • Toward a multicolor chromosome bar code for the entire human karyotype by fluorescence in situ hybridization

    S. Müller;M. Rocchi;M. A. Ferguson-Smith;J. Wienberg

  • Presence and abundance of CENP-B box sequences in great ape subsets of primate-specific alpha-satellite DNA.

    Thomas Haaf;A. Gregory Mater;Johannes Wienberg;David C. Ward

  • A reappraisal of the tandem fusion theory of karyotype evolution in Indian muntjac using chromosome painting.

    F. Yang;P. C. M. O'Brien;J. Wienberg;M. A. Ferguson-Smith

  • Comparative Genome Organization of Vertebrates

    L. Andersson;A. Archibald;M. Ashburner;S. Audun

Frequent Co-Authors

Roscoe Stanyon
Roscoe Stanyon University of Florence
Malcolm A. Ferguson-Smith
Malcolm A. Ferguson-Smith University of Cambridge
Fengtang Yang
Fengtang Yang Wellcome Sanger Institute
Patricia C. M. O’Brien
Patricia C. M. O’Brien University of Cambridge
Stephen J. O'Brien
Stephen J. O'Brien Nova Southeastern University
Leslie A. Lyons
Leslie A. Lyons University of Missouri
James E. Womack
James E. Womack Texas A&M University
Nancy A. Jenkins
Nancy A. Jenkins The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Jennifer A. Marshall Graves
Jennifer A. Marshall Graves La Trobe University
Robert W. Stark
Robert W. Stark Technical University of Darmstadt

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Best Scientists Citing Johannes Wienberg