Nathan J. Kuwada, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
2010 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, United States 
Area:
General Physics, Molecular Physics, Elementary Particles and High Energy Physics
Google:
"Nathan Kuwada"
Mean distance: (not calculated yet)
 

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Heiner Linke grad student 2010 University of Oregon
 (Simulation studies of Brownian motors.)
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.

Kisner JR, Kuwada NJ. (2019) Nucleoid-mediated positioning and transport in bacteria. Current Genetics
Cass JA, Kuwada NJ, Traxler B, et al. (2016) Escherichia coli Chromosomal Loci Segregate from Midcell with Universal Dynamics. Biophysical Journal. 110: 2597-609
Kuwada NJ, Traxler B, Wiggins PA. (2015) High-throughput cell-cycle imaging opens new doors for discovery. Current Genetics. 61: 513-6
Lampo TJ, Kuwada NJ, Wiggins PA, et al. (2015) Physical modeling of chromosome segregation in escherichia coli reveals impact of force and DNA relaxation. Biophysical Journal. 108: 146-53
Kuwada NJ, Traxler B, Wiggins PA. (2015) Genome-scale quantitative characterization of bacterial protein localization dynamics throughout the cell cycle. Molecular Microbiology. 95: 64-79
Kuwada NJ, Wiggins PA. (2015) Global Characterization of Transcription Factor Localization and Partitioning in Escherichia Coli Biophysical Journal. 108
Stylianidou S, Kuwada NJ, Wiggins PA. (2015) The Bacterial Nucleoid Drives Cytoplasmic Dynamics Biophysical Journal. 108
Cass JA, Kuwada NJ, Wiggins PA. (2015) Quantitative Investigation of the Role of SeqA in Escherichia Coli Chromosome Segregation Biophysical Journal. 108
Stylianidou S, Kuwada NJ, Wiggins PA. (2014) Cytoplasmic dynamics reveals two modes of nucleoid-dependent mobility. Biophysical Journal. 107: 2684-92
Javer A, Kuwada NJ, Long Z, et al. (2014) Persistent super-diffusive motion of Escherichia coli chromosomal loci. Nature Communications. 5: 3854
See more...