Research Topics
Species | Lisa Ann LambertSummaryAffiliation: Chatham College Country: USA Publications
| Collaborators
|
Detail Information
Publications
Evolution of the transferrin family: conservation of residues associated with iron and anion bindingLisa A Lambert
Department of Biology, Chatham College, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA
Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol 142:129-41. 2005....
Molecular evolution of the transferrin family and associated receptorsLisa A Lambert
Department of Biology, Chatham University, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA
Biochim Biophys Acta 1820:244-55. 2012..g., inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase (mammals), saxiphilin (frogs) and otolith matrix protein 1 (fish)...
Evolution of duplications in the transferrin family of proteinsLisa A Lambert
Department of Biology, Chatham College, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA
Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol 140:11-25. 2005..The creation of such a large multiple-sequence alignment provides important information and could, in the future, highlight the role of specific residues in protein function...
Molecular evolution of the transferrin receptor/glutamate carboxypeptidase II familyLisa Ann Lambert
Department of Biology, Chatham College, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA
J Mol Evol 64:113-28. 2007..The evolutionary history of the TfR/GCP2 family shows repeated episodes of duplications consistent with recent theories that nondispensable, slowly evolving genes are more likely to form multiple gene families...
Molecular evolution of hemojuvelin and the repulsive guidance molecule familyLaura Marie Camus
Department of Biology, Chatham University, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA
J Mol Evol 65:68-81. 2007..The pattern of conserved residues in each family identifies new candidates for important functional roles, including ligand binding...
Molecular evolution and characterization of hepcidin gene products in vertebratesKalley B Hilton
Department of Biology, Chatham University, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, United States
Gene 415:40-8. 2008..This, along with the absence of reported avian transferrin receptor 2 and hemojuvelin sequences, suggests that iron homeostasis in birds may be regulated by an alternative mechanism...
