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Alicia Martínez-Romero

Researcher at University of Valencia

Publications -  23
Citations -  1616

Alicia Martínez-Romero is an academic researcher from University of Valencia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Flow cytometry & Oxidative stress. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 19 publications receiving 1267 citations.

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Guidelines for the use of flow cytometry and cell sorting in immunological studies (second edition)

Andrea Cossarizza, +462 more
TL;DR: These guidelines are a consensus work of a considerable number of members of the immunology and flow cytometry community providing the theory and key practical aspects offlow cytometry enabling immunologists to avoid the common errors that often undermine immunological data.
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A human hepatocellular in vitro model to investigate steatosis.

TL;DR: These hepatic cellular models are apparently suitable to experimentally investigate the impact of fat overaccumulation in the liver excluding other factors that could influence hepatocyte behaviour.
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Human endometrial side population cells exhibit genotypic, phenotypic and functional features of somatic stem cells.

TL;DR: The functional capability of endometrial SP to develop human endometrium after subcutaneous injection in NOD-SCID mice is demonstrated and the clonogenic activity of SP cells under hypoxic conditions and the differentiation capacity in vitro to adipogenic and osteogenic lineages are analyzed.
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Cytometric analysis for drug-induced steatosis in HepG2 cells

TL;DR: An in vitro multiparametric flow cytometry assay was performed in HepG2 cells and increased BODIPY fluorescence was the most sensitive and selective marker of drug-induced steatosis, but a more consistent predictive approach was the combination of two endpoints: lipid accumulation and ROS generation.
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Cytomics: A multiparametric, dynamic approach to cell research.

TL;DR: Flow cytometry is a powerful and versatile tool that allows quantitative analysis of single molecules, prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells for basic, biotechnological, environmental and clinical studies and cytomic technologies may provide in vitro methods alternative to laboratory animals for toxicity assessment.