Jérôme Buard

2.8k total citations · 1 hit paper
31 papers, 2.1k citations indexed

About

Jérôme Buard is a scholar working on Molecular Biology, Genetics and Plant Science. According to data from OpenAlex, Jérôme Buard has authored 31 papers receiving a total of 2.1k indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 22 papers in Molecular Biology, 15 papers in Genetics and 8 papers in Plant Science. Recurrent topics in Jérôme Buard's work include DNA Repair Mechanisms (13 papers), Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics (9 papers) and Chromosomal and Genetic Variations (8 papers). Jérôme Buard is often cited by papers focused on DNA Repair Mechanisms (13 papers), Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics (9 papers) and Chromosomal and Genetic Variations (8 papers). Jérôme Buard collaborates with scholars based in France, United Kingdom and United States. Jérôme Buard's co-authors include Bernard de Massy, Corinne Grey, Gilles Vergnaud, Frédéric Baudat, Carole Ober, Adi Fledel-Alon, Molly Przeworski, Graham Coop, Alec J. Jeffreys and Dominique Gauguier and has published in prestigious journals such as Science, Nucleic Acids Research and Journal of Clinical Investigation.

In The Last Decade

Jérôme Buard

31 papers receiving 2.0k citations

Hit Papers

PRDM9 Is a Major Determinant of Meiotic Recombination Hot... 2009 2026 2014 2020 2009 200 400 600

Peers — A (Enhanced Table)

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

Name h Career Trend Papers Cites
Jérôme Buard France 20 1.5k 775 525 186 107 31 2.1k
Christine Bird United Kingdom 11 1.8k 1.2× 1.6k 2.1× 531 1.0× 380 2.0× 109 1.0× 13 2.9k
David L. Neil United Kingdom 13 1.0k 0.7× 529 0.7× 316 0.6× 195 1.0× 42 0.4× 18 1.6k
Zilla Y. H. Wong Australia 12 716 0.5× 641 0.8× 219 0.4× 94 0.5× 57 0.5× 16 1.3k
P. de Boer Netherlands 25 1.2k 0.8× 656 0.8× 366 0.7× 207 1.1× 281 2.6× 81 2.1k
Audrey Lynn United States 17 852 0.6× 430 0.6× 329 0.6× 60 0.3× 120 1.1× 22 1.3k
Ramaiah Nagaraja United States 20 1.1k 0.7× 609 0.8× 211 0.4× 116 0.6× 83 0.8× 44 1.5k
Marek Bartkuhn Germany 28 2.5k 1.6× 515 0.7× 551 1.0× 216 1.2× 58 0.5× 65 3.0k
Brigitte Brandriff United States 25 731 0.5× 520 0.7× 327 0.6× 95 0.5× 299 2.8× 40 1.6k
Klaudia Walter United Kingdom 18 1.1k 0.7× 578 0.7× 271 0.5× 115 0.6× 45 0.4× 29 1.7k
Panayiotis A. Ioannou Australia 22 774 0.5× 489 0.6× 224 0.4× 55 0.3× 108 1.0× 44 1.4k

Countries citing papers authored by Jérôme Buard

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Jérôme Buard'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 Jérôme Buard with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Jérôme Buard more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Jérôme Buard

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Jérôme Buard. 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 Jérôme Buard. The network helps show where Jérôme Buard may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Jérôme Buard

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Jérôme Buard. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Jérôme Buard 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 Jérôme Buard. Jérôme Buard 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.
Thèron, André, Céline Cosseau, Anne Rognon, et al.. (2016). Epigenetic origin of adaptive phenotypic variants in the human blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni. Epigenetics & Chromatin. 9(1). 27–27. 10 indexed citations
2.
Baudat, Frédéric, Jérôme Buard, Corinne Grey, & Bernard de Massy. (2011). Comment sont choisis les sites d’échanges entre chromosomes lors de la méiose ?. médecine/sciences. 27(12). 1053–1055. 1 indexed citations
3.
Baudat, Frédéric, Jérôme Buard, Corinne Grey, et al.. (2009). PRDM9 Is a Major Determinant of Meiotic Recombination Hotspots in Humans and Mice. Science. 327(5967). 836–840. 726 indexed citations breakdown →
4.
Buard, Jérôme, et al.. (2009). Distinct histone modifications define initiation and repair of meiotic recombination in the mouse. The EMBO Journal. 28(17). 2616–2624. 156 indexed citations
5.
Grunau, Christoph, et al.. (2006). Mapping of the juxtacentromeric heterochromatin-euchromatin frontier of human chromosome 21. Genome Research. 16(10). 1198–1207. 24 indexed citations
6.
Alkan, Can, Eray Tüzün, Jérôme Buard, et al.. (2005). Manipulating multiple sequence alignments via MaM and WebMaM. Nucleic Acids Research. 33(Web Server). W295–W298. 6 indexed citations
7.
Guettier, Catherine, Mylène Sebagh, Jérôme Buard, et al.. (2005). Male Cell Microchimerism in Normal and Diseased Female Livers From Fetal Life to Adulthood *. Hepatology. 42(1). 35–43. 56 indexed citations
8.
Buard, Jérôme, Charles Brenner, & Alec J. Jeffreys. (2002). Evolutionary Fate of an Unstable Human Minisatellite Deduced from Sperm-Mutation Spectra of Individual Alleles. The American Journal of Human Genetics. 70(4). 1038–1043. 3 indexed citations
9.
Buard, Jérôme, Andrew Collick, Jane Brown, & A. J. Jeffreys. (2000). Somatic versus Germline Mutation Processes at Minisatellite CEB1 (D2S90) in Humans and Transgenic Mice. Genomics. 65(2). 95–103. 34 indexed citations
10.
Buard, Jérôme, Angela Shone, & Alec J. Jeffreys. (2000). Meiotic Recombination and Flanking Marker Exchange at the Highly Unstable Human Minisatellite CEB1 (D2S90). The American Journal of Human Genetics. 67(2). 333–344. 39 indexed citations
11.
Jeffreys, Alec J., Ruth Barber, Philippe R.J. Bois, et al.. (1999). Human minisatellites, repeat DNA instability and meiotic recombination. Electrophoresis. 20(8). 1665–1675. 51 indexed citations
12.
Buard, Jérôme, et al.. (1999). Meiotic instability of human minisatellite CEB1 in yeast requires DNA double-strand breaks. Nature Genetics. 23(3). 367–371. 56 indexed citations
13.
Murray, John M., Jérôme Buard, David L. Neil, et al.. (1999). Comparative Sequence Analysis of Human Minisatellites Showing Meiotic Repeat Instability. Genome Research. 9(2). 130–136. 30 indexed citations
14.
Buard, Jérôme. (1998). Influences of array size and homogeneity on minisatellite mutation. The EMBO Journal. 17(12). 3495–3502. 62 indexed citations
15.
Amarger, Valérie, Dominique Gauguier, M. Yerle, et al.. (1998). Analysis of Distribution in the Human, Pig, and Rat Genomes Points toward a General Subtelomeric Origin of Minisatellite Structures. Genomics. 52(1). 62–71. 29 indexed citations
16.
Jeffreys, Alec J., Philippe R.J. Bois, Jérôme Buard, et al.. (1997). Spontaneous and induced minisatellite instability. Electrophoresis. 18(9). 1501–1511. 33 indexed citations
17.
Foucault, Frédéric, Jérôme Buard, Françoise Praz, et al.. (1996). Stability of microsatellites and minisatellites in Bloom syndrome, a human syndrome of genetic instability. Mutation Research/DNA Repair. 362(3). 227–236. 8 indexed citations
18.
Pravenec, Michal, Dominique Gauguier, Jean‐Jacques Schott, et al.. (1996). A genetic linkage map of the rat derived from recombinant inbred strains. Mammalian Genome. 7(2). 117–127. 88 indexed citations
19.
Pravenec, Michal, Dominique Gauguier, Jean‐Jacques Schott, et al.. (1995). Mapping of quantitative trait loci for blood pressure and cardiac mass in the rat by genome scanning of recombinant inbred strains.. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 96(4). 1973–1978. 143 indexed citations
20.
Vergnaud, Gilles, Dominique Gauguier, Jean‐Jacques Schott, et al.. (1993). Detection, cloning, and distribution of minisatellites in some mammalian genomes. Birkhäuser Basel eBooks. 67. 47–57. 11 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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