Three Papers, One Conclusion

For this article, Nadia S. Halim interviewed Tony Kouzarides, professor in the Wellcome Trust and Cancer Research Campaign, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Annick Harel-Bellan, research director at Laboratoire Oncogenese, Differenciation et Transduction du Signal, Villejuif, France; and Douglas Dean, head of the division of molecular oncology at Washington University, St. Louis. Data from the Web of Science (ISI, Philadelphia) show that these papers have been cited significantly more of

Written byNadia Halim
| 5 min read

Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
5:00
Share

For this article, Nadia S. Halim interviewed Tony Kouzarides, professor in the Wellcome Trust and Cancer Research Campaign, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Annick Harel-Bellan, research director at Laboratoire Oncogenese, Differenciation et Transduction du Signal, Villejuif, France; and Douglas Dean, head of the division of molecular oncology at Washington University, St. Louis. Data from the Web of Science (ISI, Philadelphia) show that these papers have been cited significantly more often than the average paper of the same type and age. A. Brehm, E.A. Miska, D.J. McCance, J.L. Reid, A.J. Bannister, T. Kouzarides, "Retinoblastoma protein recruits histone deacetylase to repress transcription," Nature, 391:597-601, 1998. (Cited in more than 180 papers since publication) L. Magnaghi-Jaulin, R. Groisman, I. Naguibneva, P. Robin, S. Lorain, J.P. Le Villain, R. Troalen, D. Trouche, and A. Harel-Bellan, "Retinoblastoma protein represses transcription by recruiting a histone deacetylase," Nature, 391:601-5, 1998. (Cited in more than 165 papers since ...

Interested in reading more?

Become a Member of

The Scientist Logo
Receive full access to digital editions of The Scientist, as well as TS Digest, feature stories, more than 35 years of archives, and much more!
Already a member? Login Here

Meet the Author

Published In

Share
Illustration of a developing fetus surrounded by a clear fluid with a subtle yellow tinge, representing amniotic fluid.
January 2026

What Is the Amniotic Fluid Composed of?

The liquid world of fetal development provides a rich source of nutrition and protection tailored to meet the needs of the growing fetus.

View this Issue
Human-Relevant In Vitro Models Enable Predictive Drug Discovery

Advancing Drug Discovery with Complex Human In Vitro Models

Stemcell Technologies
Redefining Immunology Through Advanced Technologies

Redefining Immunology Through Advanced Technologies

Ensuring Regulatory Compliance in AAV Manufacturing with Analytical Ultracentrifugation

Ensuring Regulatory Compliance in AAV Manufacturing with Analytical Ultracentrifugation

Beckman Coulter Logo
Skip the Wait for Protein Stability Data with Aunty

Skip the Wait for Protein Stability Data with Aunty

Unchained Labs

Products

Refeyn logo

Refeyn named in the Sunday Times 100 Tech list of the UK’s fastest-growing technology companies

Parse Logo

Parse Biosciences and Graph Therapeutics Partner to Build Large Functional Immune Perturbation Atlas

Sino Biological Logo

Sino Biological's Launch of SwiftFluo® TR-FRET Kits Pioneers a New Era in High-Throughout Kinase Inhibitor Screening

SPT Labtech Logo

SPT Labtech enables automated Twist Bioscience NGS library preparation workflows on SPT's firefly platform