Amos B. Oppenheim

Affiliations: 
Molecular Genetics and Biotechnology Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel, Israel 
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"Amos Oppenheim"
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Thomason LC, Oppenheim AB, Court DL. (2009) Modifying bacteriophage lambda with recombineering. Methods in Molecular Biology (Clifton, N.J.). 501: 239-51
Pearl S, Gabay C, Kishony R, et al. (2008) Nongenetic individuality in the host-phage interaction. Plos Biology. 6: e120
Edgar R, Rokney A, Feeney M, et al. (2008) Bacteriophage infection is targeted to cellular poles. Molecular Microbiology. 68: 1107-16
Rokney A, Kobiler O, Amir A, et al. (2008) Host responses influence on the induction of lambda prophage. Molecular Microbiology. 68: 29-36
Bair CL, Oppenheim A, Trostel A, et al. (2008) A phage display system designed to detect and study protein-protein interactions. Molecular Microbiology. 67: 719-28
Kobiler O, Rokney A, Oppenheim AB. (2007) Phage lambda CIII: a protease inhibitor regulating the lysis-lysogeny decision. Plos One. 2: e363
Amir A, Kobiler O, Rokney A, et al. (2007) Noise in timing and precision of gene activities in a genetic cascade. Molecular Systems Biology. 3: 71
Stavans J, Oppenheim A. (2006) DNA-protein interactions and bacterial chromosome architecture. Physical Biology. 3: R1-10
Kobiler O, Rokney A, Friedman N, et al. (2005) Quantitative kinetic analysis of the bacteriophage lambda genetic network. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102: 4470-5
Berdichevsky T, Friedberg D, Nadler C, et al. (2005) Ler Is a Negative Autoregulator of the LEE1 Operon in Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli Journal of Bacteriology. 187: 349-357
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