Donald John Graves

Affiliations: 
2000 Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United States 
 2000- University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States 
Website:
http://www.news.ucsb.edu/2004/011837/cinnamon-may-help-alleviate-diabetes-says-ucsb-researcher
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"Donald John Graves"
Bio:

http://www.news.ucsb.edu/2013/013539/uc-santa-barbara-scientists-discover-cinnamon-compounds-potential-ability-prevent
Graves, an adjunct professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, retired from Iowa State University in October 2000 and came to UCSB the same month. He was familiar with UCSB from his days as a visiting professor in the Department of Chemistry during the 1970s and decided to return. He now divides his time between UCSB and the Sansum Institute.
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/6c4c/8d11691e87f11fe1673aef5b7a2caece1517.pdf
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Parents

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Edmond H. Fischer grad student 1959 University of Washington
Edwin G. Krebs grad student 1959 University of Washington
 (The Enzymatic Dephosphorylation of Phosphorylase A? and Derived Phosphopeptides.)

Children

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Kenneth W. Olsen research assistant 1964-1967 Iowa State
Meng Chen research assistant 1992-1992 Iowa State (Plant Biology Tree)
Jerry Hsueh-ching Wang grad student 1965 Iowa State (Cell Biology Tree)

Collaborators

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John Lew collaborator 2000- UC Santa Barbara (Neurotree)
BETA: Related publications

Publications

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George RC, Lew J, Graves DJ. (2013) Interaction of cinnamaldehyde and epicatechin with tau: implications of beneficial effects in modulating Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease : Jad. 36: 21-40
Peterson DW, George RC, Scaramozzino F, et al. (2009) Cinnamon extract inhibits tau aggregation associated with Alzheimer's disease in vitro. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease : Jad. 17: 585-97
Scaramozzino F, Peterson DW, Farmer P, et al. (2006) TMAO promotes fibrillization and microtubule assembly activity in the C-terminal repeat region of tau Biochemistry. 45: 3684-3691
Bartleson C, Biorn AC, Graves DJ. (2003) Mutants of phosphorylase a altered in recognition by protein phosphatase-1 Biochemistry. 42: 3018-3024
Bartleson C, Graves DJ. (2001) An Inhibitory Segment of the Catalytic Subunit of Phosphorylase Kinase Does Not Act as a Pseudosubstrate Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276: 34560-34566
Biorn AC, Graves DJ. (2001) The amino-terminal tail of glycogen phosphorylase is a switch for controlling phosphorylase conformation, activation, and response to ligands Biochemistry. 40: 5181-5189
Biorn AC, Bartleson C, Graves DJ. (2000) Site-directed mutants of glycogen phosphorylase are altered in their interaction with phosphorylase kinase Biochemistry. 39: 15887-15894
Bartleson C, Luo S, Graves DJ, et al. (2000) Arginine to citrulline replacement in substrates of phosphorylase kinase Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta - Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology. 1480: 23-28
Graves D, Bartleson C, Biorn A, et al. (1999) Substrate and inhibitor recognition of protein kinases: what is known about the catalytic subunit of phosphorylase kinase? Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 82: 143-155
Pete MJ, Liao CX, Bartleson C, et al. (1999) A recombinant form of the catalytic subunit of phosphorylase kinase that is soluble, monomeric, and includes key C-terminal residues Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics. 367: 104-114
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