NB: This page lists my scientific papers ranked by citations.*
Only papers with at least ten citations* are listed here.
For a full list of publications click here.
Apologies for any broken links to scientific journals -- these seem
to be always on the move !
Groß M & Jaenicke R (1994)
European Journal of Biochemistry 221, 617-630 Proteins under pressure: the influence of high hydrostatic pressure on structure, function and assembly of proteins and protein complexes
345 (328;313;284;263;238;211;174;147)
Robinson CV, Groß M, Eyles SJ, Ewbank JJ, Mayhew M, Hartl FU, Dobson CM & Radford SE (1994) Nature 372, 646-651 Conformation of GroEL-bound alpha-lactalbumin probed by mass spectrometry
164 (164;156;150;144;133;127;126;119)
Chung EW, Nettleton EJ, Morgan CJ, Groß M, Miranker A, Radford SE, Dobson CM & Robinson CV (1997) Protein Science 6, 1316-1324
Hydrogen exchange properties of proteins in native and denatured states monitored by mass spectrometry and NMR
77 (77;71;61;59;54;47;42;30)
Plaxco KW & Groß M (1997) Nature 386, 657-659 Cell biology: The importance of being unfolded (News and Views)
70 (67;65;61;55;50;41;31;18)
Plaxco KW & Gross M (2001)
Nature Structural Biology 8, 659-660
Unfolded, yes - but random? Never! (News and Views)
61 (55;51;46;36;23;15;0;--)
Jaikaran ETAS, Higham CE, Serpell LC, Zurdo J, Gross M, Clark A & Fraser PE (2001)
Journal of Molecular Biology 308, 515-525
Identification of a novel human islet amyloid polypeptide beta-sheet domain
and factors influencing fibrillogenesis
59 (50;42;37;29;19;12;1;--)
Groß M, Robinson CV, Mayhew M, Hartl FU, Radford, SE (1996) Protein Science 5, 2506-2513 Significant hydrogen exchange protection in GroEL-bound DHFR is maintained during iterative rounds of substrate cycling
54 (53;49;46;43;36;33;31;28)
Groß M, Wilkins DK, Pitkeathly MC, Chung EW, Higham C, Clark A & Dobson CM (1999)
Protein Science 8, 1350-1357
Formation of amyloid fibrils by peptides derived from the bacterial cold-shock protein CspB
45 (40;38;36;33;27;22;12;9)
Groß M, Auerbach G & Jaenicke R (1993) FEBS Letters 321, 256-
260
The activities of monomeric enzymes show complex pressure-dependence
42 (39;38;38;35;33;33;31;28)
Groß M & Jaenicke R (1991) FEBS Letters 284, 87-90
Growth inhibition of lysozyme crystals at high hydrostatic pressure
41 (37;37;36;34;30;24;21;19)
Higham CE, Jaikaran ETAS, Fraser PE, Groß M & Clark A (2000) FEBS Letters 470, 55-60
Preparation of synthetic human islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) in a stable conformation to enable study
of conversion to amyloid-like fibrils FULL TEXT
38 (32;29;26;20;10;8;2;--)
Coyle JE, Jaeger J, Groß M, Robinson CV & Radford SE (1997)
Folding & Design 2, R93-R104
Structural and mechanistic consequences of polypeptide binding by GroEL
30 (29;29;28;27;24;24;23;17)
Groß M, Lehle K, Jaenicke R & Nierhaus KH (1993) European Journal of Biochemistry 218,
463-468
Pressure-induced dissociation of ribosomes and elongation cycle intermediates.
Stabilizing conditions and identification of the most sensitive functional state
28 (25;24;23;21;18;18;15;12)
Groß M & Jaenicke R (1993)
Biophysical Chemistry 45, 245-252 A kinetic model explaining the effects of hydrostatic pressure on nucleation and growth of lysozyme crystals
27 (26;26;25;24;24;22;17;17)
Groß M & Jaenicke R (1990) FEBS Letters 267, 239-
241 Pressure-induced dissociation of tight couple ribosomes
24 (22;21;21;19;17;16;15;14)
Wilkins DK, Dobson CM & Groß M * (2000)
European Journal of Biochemistry, 267, 2609-2616
Biophysical studies of the development of amyloid fibrils from a peptide fragment of cold shock protein B
20 (19;18;16)
Groß M (1996)
FEBS Letters 390, 249-252
Linguistic analysis of protein folding
13 (12;12;11;8)
Groß M (2000)
Current Protein and Peptide Science 1, 339-347
Proteins that convert from alpha helix to beta sheet: Implications for folding and disease
10 (9;6;5)
* Total number of citations according to ISI Science Citation Index determined
on 19.12.2008. Figures in () are from 19.12.2007, 21.12.2006, 20.12.2005, 22.12.2004, 23.12.2003, 3.1.2003, 27.12.2001 and 27.12.2000, respectively.
If two papers have the same number of citations, the more recent one is given
the higher ranking.
Some number-crunching: According to the definition proposed by Jorge Hirsch in 2005,
my "h-index" stands at 16 (i.e. there are 16 papers with at least 16 citations).
As the total number of papers is 32, the 16th also defines the median number of citations, which is currently 20.
Across all 32 papers,
the total number of citations is 1178, and the average number 36.8.
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