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Martine A. Collart

Martine A. Collart

D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
48
Citations
10663
World Ranking
18279
National Ranking
350

Overview

Martine A. Collart is a researcher affiliated with the University of Geneva in Switzerland. Their work focuses primarily on biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology, with a strong emphasis on molecular biology as a subfield. Over 53 publications contribute to these areas of study.

The main topics of their research include RNA research and splicing, RNA modifications and cancer, and RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms. Additional attention is given to protein structure and dynamics, RNA regulation and disease, heat shock proteins research, and genetics, aging, and longevity in model organisms.

Frequent coauthors in their research collaborations include Olesya O. Panasenko, Zoltán Villányi, George E. Allen, Szabolcs Zahorán, and Marina Zagatti.

Their publications have appeared repeatedly in notable venues such as bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Molecular Cell, Cell Reports, RNA, and Nature Communications. Among these, bioRxiv counts four publications, followed by two publications each in Molecular Cell, Cell Reports, and RNA, and one in Nature Communications.

Recent papers authored or coauthored by Martine A. Collart include:

  • Co-translational assembly and localized translation of nucleoporins in nuclear pore complex biogenesis (2021, Molecular Cell)
  • FKBP10 Regulates Protein Translation to Sustain Lung Cancer Growth (2020, Cell Reports)
  • Translational reprogramming in response to accumulating stressors ensures critical threshold levels of Hsp90 for mammalian life (2022, Nature Communications)
  • Not4 and Not5 modulate translation elongation by Rps7A ubiquitination, Rli1 moonlighting, and condensates that exclude eIF5A (2021, Cell Reports)
  • Roles of the CCR4-Not complex in translation and dynamics of co-translation events (2023, Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews - RNA)

Best Publications

  • Regulation of tumor necrosis factor alpha transcription in macrophages: involvement of four kappa B-like motifs and of constitutive and inducible forms of NF-kappa B.

    Martine Collart;P Baeuerle;Pierre Vassalli

  • Kappa B-type enhancers are involved in lipopolysaccharide-mediated transcriptional activation of the tumor necrosis factor alpha gene in primary macrophages.

    A N Shakhov;Martine Collart;Pierre Vassalli;S A Nedospasov

  • Requirement of tumour necrosis factor for development of silica-induced pulmonary fibrosis

    Pierre F. Piguet;Martine A. Collart;Georges E. Grau;André-P. Sappino

  • Tumor necrosis factor/cachectin plays a key role in bleomycin-induced pneumopathy and fibrosis.

    Pierre Piguet;Martine Collart;Georges Grau;Yusuf Kapanci

  • Gamma interferon enhances macrophage transcription of the tumor necrosis factor/cachectin, interleukin 1, and urokinase genes, which are controlled by short-lived repressors.

    Martine Collart;Dominique Belin;Jean-Dominique Vassalli;S. de Kossodo

  • Preparation of yeast RNA

    Martine A. Collart;Salvatore Oliviero

  • The Ccr4--not complex.

    Martine A. Collart;Olesya O. Panasenko

  • The Ccr4‐Not complex is a key regulator of eukaryotic gene expression

    Martine A. Collart

  • Identification of a ubiquitin-protein ligase subunit within the CCR4-NOT transcription repressor complex

    Thomas K. Albert;Hiroyuki Hanzawa;Yvonne I.A. Legtenberg;Marjolein J. de Ruwe

  • NOT1(CDC39), NOT2(CDC36), NOT3, and NOT4 encode a global-negative regulator of transcription that differentially affects TATA-element utilization.

    Martine Collart;Kevin Struhl

  • Global control of gene expression in yeast by the Ccr4-Not complex.

    Martine A Collart

  • Isolation and characterization of human orthologs of yeast CCR4–NOT complex subunits

    Thomas K. Albert;Marc Lemaire;Nynke L. van Berkum;Reiner Gentz

  • The CCR4 and CAF1 proteins of the CCR4-NOT complex are physically and functionally separated from NOT2, NOT4, and NOT5.

    Yongli Bai;Christopher Salvadore;Yueh-Chin Chiang;Martine A. Collart

  • The NOT, SPT3, and MOT1 genes functionally interact to regulate transcription at core promoters.

    Martine A. Collart

  • The Eukaryotic Ccr4-Not Complex: A Regulatory Platform Integrating mRNA Metabolism with Cellular Signaling Pathways?

    Martine A Collart;H Th Marc Timmers

  • Ribosome pausing, a dangerous necessity for co-translational events.

    Martine A Collart;Benjamin Weiss

  • LKB1 interacts with and phosphorylates PTEN: a functional link between two proteins involved in cancer predisposing syndromes

    Hamid Mehenni;Nathalie Lin-Marq;Karine Buchet-Poyau;Alexandre Reymond

  • The essential function of Not1 lies within the Ccr4-Not complex.

    Laurent Maillet;Chi Tu;Young Kwon Hong;Elisabeth O Shuster

  • c-fos gene transcription in murine macrophages is modulated by a calcium-dependent block to elongation in intron 1.

    Martine Collart;N. Tourkine;Dominique Belin;Pierre Vassalli

  • CDC39, an essential nuclear protein that negatively regulates transcription and differentially affects the constitutive and inducible HIS3 promoters

    Martine Collart;Kevin Struhl

Frequent Co-Authors

Pierre Vassalli
Pierre Vassalli University of Geneva
Dominique Belin
Dominique Belin University of Geneva
Georges E. Grau
Georges E. Grau University of Sydney
H. Th. Marc Timmers
H. Th. Marc Timmers University of Freiburg
Jean-Dominique Vassalli
Jean-Dominique Vassalli University of Geneva
Claudio De Virgilio
Claudio De Virgilio University of Fribourg
Kevin Struhl
Kevin Struhl Harvard University
Lars M. Steinmetz
Lars M. Steinmetz Stanford University
Alexandre Reymond
Alexandre Reymond University of Lausanne
Stylianos E. Antonarakis
Stylianos E. Antonarakis University of Geneva

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