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Gerald M. Rubin

Researcher at Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Publications -  390
Citations -  126301

Gerald M. Rubin is an academic researcher from Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Drosophila melanogaster. The author has an hindex of 152, co-authored 382 publications receiving 115248 citations. Previous affiliations of Gerald M. Rubin include Stanford University & University of California, San Diego.

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Gene Ontology: tool for the unification of biology

TL;DR: The goal of the Gene Ontology Consortium is to produce a dynamic, controlled vocabulary that can be applied to all eukaryotes even as knowledge of gene and protein roles in cells is accumulating and changing.
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The genome sequence of Drosophila melanogaster

Mark Raymond Adams, +194 more
- 24 Mar 2000 - 
TL;DR: The nucleotide sequence of nearly all of the approximately 120-megabase euchromatic portion of the Drosophila genome is determined using a whole-genome shotgun sequencing strategy supported by extensive clone-based sequence and a high-quality bacterial artificial chromosome physical map.
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The Gene Ontology (GO) database and informatics resource.

Midori A. Harris, +96 more
TL;DR: The Gene Ontology (GO) project as discussed by the authors provides structured, controlled vocabularies and classifications that cover several domains of molecular and cellular biology and are freely available for community use in the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences.
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Genetic Transformation of Drosophila with Transposable Element Vectors

TL;DR: A rosy transposon (ry1), constructed by inserting a chromosomal DNA fragment containing the wild-type rosy gene into a P transposable element, transformed germ line cells in 20 to 50 percent of the injected rosy mutant embryos indicating that the visible genetic defect in the host strain could be fully and permanently corrected by the transferred gene.
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Generation and initial analysis of more than 15,000 full-length human and mouse cDNA sequences.

Robert L. Strausberg, +81 more
TL;DR: The National Institutes of Health Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC) Program is a multiinstitutional effort to identify and sequence a cDNA clone containing a complete ORF for each human and mouse gene.