World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Genetics

D-Index
71
Citations
13570
World Ranking
2219
National Ranking
998

Overview

Lawrence Bogorad is affiliated with Harvard University in the United States. Their academic profile indicates an association with this institution, reflecting an engagement within a prominent research environment.

Although specific details about their research papers, co-authors, or publication venues are not provided, the connection to Harvard University suggests involvement in rigorous scientific study and potentially diverse research collaborations.

The available data does not list specific fields of study, subfields, or main topics of work, nor any known book publications or awards. This limits the capacity to provide detailed information on the thematic focus or contributions of their research.

Without details on publications or other scholarly outputs, it is not possible to outline a bibliometric profile or highlight particular scientific contributions. Similarly, the absence of award recognition information prevents commentary on formal recognitions.

Given the current information, the profile centers primarily on the scientist's institutional affiliation without additional elaboration on their research scope or academic impact.

Best Publications

  • COMPLEMENTARY CHROMATIC ADAPTATION IN A FILAMENTOUS BLUE-GREEN ALGA

    Allen Bennett;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Chloroplast gene sequence for the large subunit of ribulose bisphosphatecarboxylase of maize

    Lee McIntosh;Carsten Poulsen;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Nuclear-organelle interactions: Nuclear antisense gene inhibits ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase enzyme levels in transformed tobacco plants

    Steven R. Rodermel;Marilyn S. Abbott;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: an improved method for ribosomal proteins.

    Laurens J. Mets;Lawrence Bogorad

  • The maize chloroplast genes for the beta and epsilon subunits of the photosynthetic coupling factor CF1 are fused.

    Enno T. Krebbers;Ignacio M. Larrinua;Lee McIntosh;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Studies on Chlamydomonas chloroplast transformation: foreign DNA can be stably maintained in the chromosome.

    Alan D. Blowers;Lawrence Bogorad;Katherine B. Shark;John C. Sanford

  • Regulation by copper of the expression of plastocyanin and cytochrome c552 in Chlamydomonas reinhardi.

    S Merchant;L Bogorad

  • Evolution of organelles and eukaryotic genomes

    Lawrence Bogorad

  • Yeast activators stimulate plant gene expression

    Jun Ma;Elisabeth Przibilla;Jim Hu;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Zea mays chloroplast ribosomal RNA genes are part of a 22,000 base pair inverted repeat.

    John R. Bedbrook;Richard Kolodner;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Engineering chloroplasts: an alternative site for foreign genes, proteins, reactions and products.

    Lawrence Bogorad

  • Maize chloroplast RNA polymerase: the 180-, 120-, and 38-kilodalton polypeptides are encoded in chloroplast genes.

    Jim Hu;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Membrane proteins synthesized but not processed by isolated maize chloroplasts.

    A E Grebanier;D M Coen;A Rich;L Bogorad

  • The impact of decreased Rubisco on photosynthesis, growth, allocation and storage in tobacco plants which have been transformed with antisense rbcS

    W. P. Quick;U. Schurr;K. Fichtner;E.-D. Schulze

  • The topology of a membrane protein: The orientation of the 32 kd Qb-binding chloroplast thylakoid membrane protein

    Richard T. Sayre;Bertil Andersson;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Rapid degradation of apoplastocyanin in Cu(II)-deficient cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

    S Merchant;L Bogorad

  • Newly synthesized proteins are degraded by an ATP-stimulated proteolytic process in isolated pea chloroplasts

    Ladislav Malek;Lawrence Bogorad;Arthur R. Ayers;Alfred L. Goldberg

  • Light-regulated and endogenous fluctuations of chloroplast transcript levels in Chlamydomonas. Regulation by transcription and RNA degradation.

    Maria L. Salvador;Uwe Klein;Lawrence Bogorad

  • Decreased Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphate Carboxylase-Oxygenase in Transgenic Tobacco Transformed with Antisense Rbcs .5. Relationship between Photosynthetic Rate, Storage Strategy, Biomass Allocation and Vegetative Plant-Growth at 3 Different Nitrogen Supplies

    K. Fichtner;W. P. Quick;Ernst Detlef Schulze;H. A. Mooney

  • The Cu(II)-repressible plastidic cytochrome c. Cloning and sequence of a complementary DNA for the pre-apoprotein.

    S Merchant;L Bogorad

Frequent Co-Authors

Maureen R. Hanson
Maureen R. Hanson Cornell University
Ernst-Detlef Schulze
Ernst-Detlef Schulze Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
Mark Stitt
Mark Stitt Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology
W. P. Quick
W. P. Quick University of Sheffield
Sabeeha S. Merchant
Sabeeha S. Merchant University of California, Berkeley
Christopher L. Woodcock
Christopher L. Woodcock University of Massachusetts Amherst
Gerhard Link
Gerhard Link Ruhr University Bochum
Richard T. Sayre
Richard T. Sayre Los Alamos National Laboratory
Donald M. Coen
Donald M. Coen Harvard University

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