David-Paul Minde
postdoc, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire · United Kingdom
Editorial leadership for International Journal of Personalized Medicine
Research interests
- Protein Folding Membrane Proteins Intrinsically Disordered Proteins
Biography
David-Paul Minde is a postdoc at the University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom. He completed his PhD on the tumor suppressor protein APC before undertaking his first postdoctoral position focused on single-molecule studies of protein folding. His second postdoctoral appointment centers on membrane proteomics. His most-cited publication, "Biotin proximity tagging favours unfolded proteins and enables the study of intrinsically disordered regions" (2020), has been cited 39 times and reflects his expertise in protein structure and proteomics methodologies.
Selected publications
- Biotin proximity tagging favours unfolded proteins and enables the study of intrinsically disordered regions 2020 cited 39×
- Simultaneous sensing and imaging of individual biomolecular complexes enabled by modular DNA–protein coupling 2020 cited 23×
- PLK1 inhibition dampens NLRP3 inflammasome–elicited response in inflammatory disease models 2023 cited 22×
- Cellular labelling favours unfolded proteins 2018 cited 3×
- Drosophila nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits and their native interactions with insecticidal peptide toxins 2021 cited 2×
- Reversible hypervascularization drives cognitive decline and blood-brain barrier damage during aging Recent 2026
Ranked by citation impact (Crossref) where available, newest otherwise · verified via ORCID.
Considering IJPM for your work?
This journal is guided by David-Paul Minde (postdoc, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) and a peer-review board of practising researchers. Open access, author-retained copyright (CC BY), and a clear editorial process.