World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Chemistry

D-Index
61
Citations
14774
World Ranking
9170
National Ranking
2588

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
74
Citations
20360
World Ranking
5584
National Ranking
2653

Overview

Thomas A. Neubert is affiliated with New York University in the United States and conducts research primarily within the fields of Biochemistry, Genetics, and Molecular Biology, with additional work in Medicine. Their research expands into subfields such as Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Physiology, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, and Immunology.

The scientist's work covers several main topics, including:

  • Mitochondrial Function and Pathology
  • Alzheimer's disease research and treatments
  • Cellular transport and secretion
  • Extracellular vesicles in disease
  • ATP Synthase and ATPases Research
  • Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling
  • Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research

Frequent co-authors of Thomas A. Neubert include Hediye Erdjument-Bromage with 37 joint works, Gabriela Chiosis (7), Stephen D. Ginsberg (6), Pengrong Yan (6), and Palak Panchal (6).

Their published research often appears in venues such as bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) with 8 publications, Nature Communications (4), Cell Reports (3), Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology (3), and Science Advances (2).

Notable recent papers authored by or including Thomas A. Neubert are:

  • "Mitovesicles are a novel population of extracellular vesicles of mitochondrial origin altered in Down syndrome," 2021, Science Advances
  • "The epichaperome is a mediator of toxic hippocampal stress and leads to protein connectivity-based dysfunction," 2020, Nature Communications
  • "Neuronal Inactivity Co-opts LTP Machinery to Drive Potassium Channel Splicing and Homeostatic Spike Widening," 2020, Cell
  • "Lysosomal dysfunction in Down syndrome and Alzheimer mouse models is caused by v-ATPase inhibition by Tyr 682 -phosphorylated APP βCTF," 2023, Science Advances
  • "Molecular Stressors Engender Protein Connectivity Dysfunction through Aberrant N-Glycosylation of a Chaperone," 2020, Cell Reports

Best Publications

  • Multi-site assessment of the precision and reproducibility of multiple reaction monitoring–based measurements of proteins in plasma

    Terri A. Addona;Susan E. Abbatiello;Birgit Schilling;Steven J. Skates

  • The minimum information about a proteomics experiment (MIAPE)

    Chris F. Taylor;Chris F. Taylor;Norman W. Paton;Norman W. Paton;Kathryn S. Lilley;Kathryn S. Lilley;Pierre Alain Binz;Pierre Alain Binz

  • The molecular basis for selective inhibition of unconventional mRNA splicing by an IRE1-binding small molecule

    Benedict C. S. Cross;Peter J. Bond;Pawel G. Sadowski;Babal Kant Jha

  • Molecular insights into the klotho-dependent, endocrine mode of action of fibroblast growth factor 19 subfamily members

    Regina Goetz;Andrew Beenken;Omar A. Ibrahimi;Juliya Kalinina

  • Repeatability and Reproducibility in Proteomic Identifications by Liquid Chromatography−Tandem Mass Spectrometry

    David L. Tabb;Lorenzo Vega-Montoto;Lorenzo Vega-Montoto;Paul A. Rudnick;Asokan Mulayath Variyath;Asokan Mulayath Variyath

  • The Matrix Peptide Exporter HAF-1 Signals a Mitochondrial UPR by Activating the Transcription Factor ZC376.7 in C. elegans

    Cole M. Haynes;Yun Yang;Steven P. Blais;Thomas A. Neubert

  • Uroplakin Ia is the urothelial receptor for uropathogenic Escherichia coli: evidence from in vitro FimH binding.

    Ge Zhou;Wen-Jun Mo;Peter Sebbel;Guangwei Min

  • Phosphorylation of the PRC2 component Ezh2 is cell cycle-regulated and up-regulates its binding to ncRNA

    Syuzo Kaneko;Gang Li;Jinsook Son;Chong-Feng Xu

  • The CD26-related dipeptidyl aminopeptidase-like protein DPPX is a critical component of neuronal A-type K+ channels.

    Marcela S. Nadal;Andrés Ozaita;Yimy Amarillo;Eleazar Vega-Saenz de Miera

  • The Target of the NSD Family of Histone Lysine Methyltransferases Depends on the Nature of the Substrate

    Yan Li;Patrick Trojer;Chong-Feng Xu;Peggie Cheung

  • A molecular brake in the kinase hinge region regulates the activity of receptor tyrosine kinases.

    Huaibin Chen;Jinghong Ma;Wanqing Li;Anna V. Eliseenkova

  • Oxidative protein folding by an endoplasmic reticulum localized peroxiredoxin

    Ester Zito;Eduardo Pinho Melo;Eduardo Pinho Melo;Yun Yang;Åsa Wahlander

  • Identification and Verification of Novel Rodent Postsynaptic Density Proteins

    Bryen A. Jordan;Brian D. Fernholz;Muriel Boussac;Chongfeng Xu

  • The Pseudokinase Domain of JAK2 Is a Dual-Specificity Protein Kinase That Negatively Regulates Cytokine Signaling

    Daniela Ungureanu;Jinhua Wu;Jinhua Wu;Tuija Pekkala;Yashavanthi Niranjan

  • Canonical and alternate functions of the microRNA biogenesis machinery

    Mark M.W. Chong;Guoan Zhang;Sihem Cheloufi;Thomas A. Neubert

  • γCaMKII Shuttles Ca2+/CaM to the Nucleus to Trigger CREB Phosphorylation and Gene Expression

    Huan Ma;Rachel D. Groth;Samuel M. Cohen;John F. Emery

  • Mitovesicles are a novel population of extracellular vesicles of mitochondrial origin altered in Down syndrome.

    Pasquale D’Acunzo;Pasquale D’Acunzo;Rocío Pérez-González;Rocío Pérez-González;Yohan Kim;Yohan Kim;Tal Hargash

  • Sample preparation for serum/plasma profiling and biomarker identification by mass spectrometry.

    Jose L. Luque-Garcia;Thomas A. Neubert

  • The NH2 terminus of retinal recoverin is acylated by a small family of fatty acids.

    Alexander M. Dizhoor;Lowell H. Ericsson;Richard S. Johnson;Santosh Kumar

  • The rod transducin alpha subunit amino terminus is heterogeneously fatty acylated.

    Thomas A. Neubert;Richard S. Johnson;James B. Hurley;Kenneth A. Walsh

  • Comparison of commercially available target enrichment methods for next-generation sequencing.

    Kip Bodi;A. G. Perera;P. S. Adams;D. Bintzler

Frequent Co-Authors

Moosa Mohammadi
Moosa Mohammadi New York University Langone Medical Center
Jorge Ghiso
Jorge Ghiso New York University
Paul Tempst
Paul Tempst Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Steven A. Carr
Steven A. Carr Broad Institute
Birgit Schilling
Birgit Schilling Buck Institute for Research on Aging
Amanda G. Paulovich
Amanda G. Paulovich Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
daniel c liebler
daniel c liebler Vanderbilt University
Susan J. Fisher
Susan J. Fisher University of California, San Francisco
David Fenyö
David Fenyö New York University
Moses V. Chao
Moses V. Chao New York University

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