Gary W. Daughdrill

5.3k total citations · 1 hit paper
56 papers, 3.9k citations indexed

About

Gary W. Daughdrill is a scholar working on Molecular Biology, Materials Chemistry and Oncology. According to data from OpenAlex, Gary W. Daughdrill has authored 56 papers receiving a total of 3.9k indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 50 papers in Molecular Biology, 19 papers in Materials Chemistry and 18 papers in Oncology. Recurrent topics in Gary W. Daughdrill's work include Protein Structure and Dynamics (25 papers), Enzyme Structure and Function (19 papers) and Cancer-related Molecular Pathways (18 papers). Gary W. Daughdrill is often cited by papers focused on Protein Structure and Dynamics (25 papers), Enzyme Structure and Function (19 papers) and Cancer-related Molecular Pathways (18 papers). Gary W. Daughdrill collaborates with scholars based in United States, Russia and Hungary. Gary W. Daughdrill's co-authors include A. Keith Dunker, Celeste J. Brown, Vladimir N. Uversky, Péter Tompa, Rohit V. Pappu, Benjamin Lang, Joerg Gsponer, Mónika Fuxreiter, Robert J. Weatheritt and Philip M. Kim and has published in prestigious journals such as Chemical Reviews, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Nucleic Acids Research.

In The Last Decade

Gary W. Daughdrill

55 papers receiving 3.9k citations

Hit Papers

Classification of Intrinsically Disordered Regions and Pr... 2014 2026 2018 2022 2014 500 1000 1.5k

Peers — A (Enhanced Table)

Peers by citation overlap · career bar shows stage (early→late) cites · hero ref

Name h Career Trend Papers Cites
Gary W. Daughdrill United States 26 3.3k 899 403 391 376 56 3.9k
Veronika Csizmók Canada 17 2.9k 0.9× 692 0.8× 397 1.0× 228 0.6× 203 0.5× 26 3.4k
Karyn T. O’Neil United States 27 3.6k 1.1× 726 0.8× 361 0.9× 236 0.6× 275 0.7× 53 4.4k
Beáta G. Vértessy Hungary 35 2.9k 0.9× 652 0.7× 360 0.9× 467 1.2× 272 0.7× 188 3.9k
Anna R. Panchenko United States 43 4.6k 1.4× 805 0.9× 339 0.8× 558 1.4× 217 0.6× 115 5.3k
David E. Anderson United States 23 2.5k 0.8× 729 0.8× 310 0.8× 530 1.4× 221 0.6× 43 3.4k
Charles R. Kissinger United States 21 4.4k 1.3× 1.2k 1.3× 435 1.1× 548 1.4× 437 1.2× 31 5.5k
Amy E. Keating United States 36 3.7k 1.1× 516 0.6× 455 1.1× 303 0.8× 284 0.8× 94 4.7k
Rasmus H. Fogh United Kingdom 16 2.8k 0.8× 606 0.7× 335 0.8× 355 0.9× 175 0.5× 27 3.6k
In‐Ja L. Byeon United States 40 2.8k 0.8× 647 0.7× 338 0.8× 223 0.6× 485 1.3× 78 4.0k
Daniel Boehringer Switzerland 38 4.7k 1.4× 525 0.6× 389 1.0× 573 1.5× 273 0.7× 105 6.0k

Countries citing papers authored by Gary W. Daughdrill

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Gary W. Daughdrill's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by Gary W. Daughdrill with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Gary W. Daughdrill more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Gary W. Daughdrill

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Gary W. Daughdrill. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by Gary W. Daughdrill. The network helps show where Gary W. Daughdrill may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Gary W. Daughdrill

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Gary W. Daughdrill. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Gary W. Daughdrill based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with Gary W. Daughdrill. Gary W. Daughdrill is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

20 of 20 papers shown
1.
Daughdrill, Gary W., et al.. (2023). Protein disorder and autoinhibition: The role of multivalency and effective concentration. Current Opinion in Structural Biology. 83. 102705–102705. 13 indexed citations
2.
Foutel, Nicolás S. González, Juliana Glavina, Wade M. Borcherds, et al.. (2022). Conformational buffering underlies functional selection in intrinsically disordered protein regions. Nature Structural & Molecular Biology. 29(8). 781–790. 69 indexed citations
3.
Daughdrill, Gary W.. (2020). Disorder for Dummies: Functional Mutagenesis of Transient Helical Segments in Disordered Proteins. Methods in molecular biology. 2141. 3–20. 6 indexed citations
4.
Li, Qingliang, Mousumi Das, Lihong Chen, et al.. (2020). Inhibition of p53 DNA binding by a small molecule protects mice from radiation toxicity. Oncogene. 39(29). 5187–5200. 7 indexed citations
5.
Borcherds, Wade M., et al.. (2019). Evolution of Transient Helicity and Disorder in Late Embryogenesis Abundant Protein COR15A. Biophysical Journal. 116(3). 473a–473a. 1 indexed citations
6.
Crabtree, Michael, et al.. (2017). Conserved Helix-Flanking Prolines Modulate Intrinsically Disordered Protein:Target Affinity by Altering the Lifetime of the Bound Complex. Biochemistry. 56(18). 2379–2384. 37 indexed citations
7.
Borcherds, Wade M., Andreas Becker, Lihong Chen, et al.. (2017). Optimal Affinity Enhancement by a Conserved Flexible Linker Controls p53 Mimicry in MdmX. Biophysical Journal. 112(10). 2038–2042. 25 indexed citations
8.
Lee, Robin van der, Marija Buljan, Benjamin Lang, et al.. (2014). Classification of Intrinsically Disordered Regions and Proteins. Repository of the Academy's Library (Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences). 1 indexed citations
9.
Lee, Chewook, Lajos Kalmár, Bin Xue, et al.. (2013). Contribution of proline to the pre-structuring tendency of transient helical secondary structure elements in intrinsically disordered proteins. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects. 1840(3). 993–1003. 25 indexed citations
10.
Borcherds, Wade M., Stepan Kashtanov, & Gary W. Daughdrill. (2013). Structural Divergence Exceeds Sequence Divergence for a Family of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins. Biophysical Journal. 104(2). 54a–54a. 1 indexed citations
11.
Kashtanov, Stepan, Wade M. Borcherds, Hongwei Wu, Gary W. Daughdrill, & F. Marty Ytreberg. (2012). Using Chemical Shifts to Assess Transient Secondary Structure and Generate Ensemble Structures of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins. Methods in molecular biology. 895. 139–152. 15 indexed citations
12.
Daughdrill, Gary W., Stepan Kashtanov, Shannon E. Hill, et al.. (2011). Understanding the structural ensembles of a highly extended disordered protein. Molecular BioSystems. 8(1). 308–319. 36 indexed citations
13.
Brown, Celeste J., Audra Johnson, A. Keith Dunker, & Gary W. Daughdrill. (2011). Evolution and disorder. Current Opinion in Structural Biology. 21(3). 441–446. 221 indexed citations
14.
Sota, Masahiro, Hirokazu Yano, Julie M. Hughes, et al.. (2010). Shifts in the host range of a promiscuous plasmid through parallel evolution of its replication initiation protein. The ISME Journal. 4(12). 1568–1580. 79 indexed citations
15.
Lowry, David F., Cédric Bernard, Malene Ringkjøbing Jensen, et al.. (2010). Solution structure of the C‐terminal X domain of the measles virus phosphoprotein and interaction with the intrinsically disordered C‐terminal domain of the nucleoprotein. Journal of Molecular Recognition. 23(5). 435–447. 77 indexed citations
16.
Brown, Celeste J., Anna K. Johnson, & Gary W. Daughdrill. (2009). Comparing Models of Evolution for Ordered and Disordered Proteins. Molecular Biology and Evolution. 27(3). 609–621. 154 indexed citations
17.
Daughdrill, Gary W., David F. Lowry, & Andrew C. Hausrath. (2009). A Robust Approach for Analyzing a Heterogeneous Structural Ensemble. Biophysical Journal. 96(3). 318a–318a. 2 indexed citations
18.
Lowry, David F., et al.. (2007). Identifying long‐range structure in the intrinsically unstructured transactivation domain of p53. Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics. 67(3). 526–530. 40 indexed citations
19.
Daughdrill, Gary W.. (2001). The weak interdomain coupling observed in the 70 kDa subunit of human replication protein A is unaffected by ssDNA binding. Nucleic Acids Research. 29(15). 3270–3276. 37 indexed citations
20.
Jacobs, Doris M., Andrew Lipton, Nancy Isern, et al.. (1999). Human replication protein A: Global fold of the N-terminal RPA-70 domain reveals a basic cleft and flexible C-terminal linker†. Journal of Biomolecular NMR. 14(4). 321–331. 85 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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