🏆 Finalist — NIH Data Sharing Index (“S-Index”) Challenge
Demo corpus. Scores are computed on a select set of biomedical paper/datasets and may be inaccurate for papers outside this corpus — DataRank relies on network effects that improve with scale. We aim to expand this into a fully open resource pending additional funding.

The language of covalent histone modifications

Nature(2000)10.1038/47412Source: DataRank Database

The language of covalent histone modifications is a research paper published in Nature (2000). On theSindex it has a DataRank of 1.4. It has been cited 8,549 times. Its calibrated FAIR score is 61/100.

N/A
1.4DataRank · unranked
1.4
8549 citations · base score 9.1
Cite:
datarank_citation_only_1hop_v6· scope data_onlyMethodology

Abstract

Histone proteins and the nucleosomes they form with DNA are the fundamental building blocks of eukaryotic chromatin. A diverse array of post-translational modifications that often occur on tail domains of these proteins has been well documented. Although the function of these highly conserved modifications has remained elusive, converging biochemical and genetic evidence suggests functions in several chromatin-based processes. We propose that distinct histone modifications, on one or more tails, act sequentially or in combination to form a 'histone code' that is, read by other proteins to bring about distinct downstream events.

Data sources & pipeline
Pipeline:MetadataData-paper checkEnrichmentCitation networkScoring
Enrichment:Pending

FAIR Checklist

Context only (not used in score)
Findable (1/2)
  • Has DOI
Accessible (0/2)
    Interoperable (0/2)
      Reusable (0/3)

        FAIR checklist signals are shown for context only and do not affect DataRank scoring.

        61FAIR score
        F Findable
        100
        A Accessible
        70
        I Interoperable
        50
        R Reusable
        25
        Top 7% by FAIRdeterministic⚠ abstract only
        Estimated from the abstract only. The agent couldn't read this paper's full text, so body-dependent criteria (data-availability statement, formats, license) are inferred. For a confident score, upload the PDF or supply full text →

        Calibrated FAIR score — a parallel quality metric, independent of the DataRank citation score. See the full evaluation →

        DataRank Breakdown

        Base Score 100%Citation Network 0%

        Base Score Contribution

        1.4

        From this paper's citation signal

        Citation Network Contribution

        0

        Citation network not refreshed for this result

        This paper's DataRank is currently driven only by its base citation score. Citation network data was not refreshed for this result.

        Learn more about DataRank methodology →
        Why this DataRank?

        DataRank blends this paper's own citation count with the influence of the papers that cite it. Here, roughly 100% comes from its base citations and 0% from the citation network.

        Base score B(p)
        log1p(citation_count) — grows sub-linearly, so a paper with 1,000 citations is not 10× a paper with 100.
        Network N(p)
        Σ over citers of log1p(Cq) ÷ max(outdegreeq, 1). Being cited by a highly-cited paper with few references counts most.
        Damping factor d = 0.85
        DataRank = (1−d)·B(p) + d·N(p) — the two cards above are each already multiplied by their share.
        Self-citations excluded
        Citers sharing any OpenAlex author ID with this paper are filtered out before the network sum.

        Citers are pulled from OpenAlex sorted by cited_by_count:descand capped per paper, so when the cap binds we keep the highest-signal references and the score is reproducible across reruns.

        Read the full methodology →

        Authors (2)

        Related Papers (10)

        Nature(1997)
        co-citedsame journal
        10.1038/38444
        Genes & Development(1998)
        co-cited
        10.1101/gad.12.5.599
        Nature(2012)
        co-citedsame journal
        10.1038/nature10728