☰

Andrew L. Hufton, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 
Google:
"Andrew Hufton"

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Julie Baker grad student 2006 Stanford
 (Genetic control of embryo patterning in Xenopus laevis: Description of the anterior inducer XGREUL1 and a genomic analysis of organizer function.)
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Thomas-Chollier M, Hufton A, Heinig M, et al. (2011) Transcription factor binding predictions using TRAP for the analysis of ChIP-seq data and regulatory SNPs. Nature Protocols. 6: 1860-9
Warnatz HJ, Querfurth R, Guerasimova A, et al. (2010) Functional analysis and identification of cis-regulatory elements of human chromosome 21 gene promoters. Nucleic Acids Research. 38: 6112-23
Hufton AL, Panopoulou G. (2009) Polyploidy and genome restructuring: a variety of outcomes. Current Opinion in Genetics & Development. 19: 600-6
Hufton AL, Mathia S, Braun H, et al. (2009) Deeply conserved chordate noncoding sequences preserve genome synteny but do not drive gene duplicate retention. Genome Research. 19: 2036-51
Koestner U, Shnitsar I, Linnemannstöns K, et al. (2008) Semaphorin and neuropilin expression during early morphogenesis of Xenopus laevis. Developmental Dynamics : An Official Publication of the American Association of Anatomists. 237: 3853-63
Hufton AL, Groth D, Vingron M, et al. (2008) Early vertebrate whole genome duplications were predated by a period of intense genome rearrangement. Genome Research. 18: 1582-91
Hufton AL, Vinayagam A, Suhai S, et al. (2006) Genomic analysis of Xenopus organizer function. Bmc Developmental Biology. 6: 27
Kim SW, Hufton A, Wong W, et al. (2006) Genomic analysis of endoderm transcription in Xenopus Developmental Biology. 295: 391
Borchers AG, Hufton AL, Eldridge AG, et al. (2002) The E3 ubiquitin ligase GREUL1 anteriorizes ectoderm during Xenopus development. Developmental Biology. 251: 395-408
See more...