Rahul K Das
Overview
Explore the profile of Rahul K Das including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
18
Citations
1334
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
APOBEC mutagenesis and selection for NFE2L2 contribute to the origin of lung squamous-cell carcinoma
Cannataro V, Kudalkar S, Dasari K, Gaffney S, Lazowski H, Jackson L, et al.
Lung Cancer
. 2022 Jul;
171:34-41.
PMID: 35872531
Lung squamous-cell carcinoma originates as a consequence of oncogenic molecular variants arising from diverse mutagenic processes such as tobacco, defective homologous recombination, aging, and cytidine deamination by APOBEC proteins. Only...
2.
Das R, Panda S, Bhol C, Bhutia S, Mohapatra S
Langmuir
. 2019 Nov;
35(47):15320-15329.
PMID: 31682135
Use of nanomaterials blessed with both therapeutic and diagnostic properties is a proficient strategy in the treatment of cancer in its early stage. In this context, our paper reports the...
3.
Beveridge R, Migas L, Das R, Pappu R, Kriwacki R, Barran P
J Am Chem Soc
. 2019 Mar;
141(12):4908-4918.
PMID: 30823702
The global dimensions and amplitudes of conformational fluctuations of intrinsically disordered proteins are governed, in part, by the linear segregation versus clustering of oppositely charged residues within the primary sequence....
4.
Das R, Pramanik A, Majhi M, Mohapatra S
Langmuir
. 2018 Apr;
34(18):5253-5262.
PMID: 29634272
Construction of a theranostic agent which integrates multiple modalities with different functions into one entity is challenging from a molecular design and synthesis perspective. In this context, the present paper...
5.
Staller M, Holehouse A, Swain-Lenz D, Das R, Pappu R, Cohen B
Cell Syst
. 2018 Mar;
6(4):444-455.e6.
PMID: 29525204
Transcriptional activation domains are essential for gene regulation, but their intrinsic disorder and low primary sequence conservation have made it difficult to identify the amino acid composition features that underlie...
6.
Sherry K, Das R, Pappu R, Barrick D
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
. 2017 Oct;
114(44):E9243-E9252.
PMID: 29078291
Intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) play important roles in proteins that regulate gene expression. A prominent example is the intracellular domain of the Notch receptor (NICD), which regulates the transcription of...
7.
Holehouse A, Das R, Ahad J, Richardson M, Pappu R
Biophys J
. 2017 Jan;
112(1):16-21.
PMID: 28076807
Intrinsically disordered proteins and regions (IDPs) represent a large class of proteins that are defined by conformational heterogeneity and lack of persistent tertiary/secondary structure. IDPs play important roles in a...
8.
Das R, Huang Y, Phillips A, Kriwacki R, Pappu R
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
. 2016 May;
113(20):5616-21.
PMID: 27140628
Peptide motifs embedded within intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) of proteins are often the sites of posttranslational modifications that control cell-signaling pathways. How do IDR sequences modulate the functionalities of motifs?...
9.
Mohapatra S, Rout S, Das R, Nayak S, Ghosh S
Langmuir
. 2016 Jan;
32(6):1611-20.
PMID: 26794061
Judicious combination of fluorescence and magnetic properties along with ample drug loading capacity and control release property remains a key challenge in the design of nanotheranostic agents. This paper reports...
10.
Gruet A, Dosnon M, Blocquel D, Brunel J, Gerlier D, Das R, et al.
FEBS J
. 2015 Dec;
283(4):576-94.
PMID: 26684000
Despite the partial disorder-to-order transition that intrinsically disordered proteins often undergo upon binding to their partners, a considerable amount of residual disorder may be retained in the bound form, resulting...