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Bernard H. Brownstein

Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis

Publications -  57
Citations -  9870

Bernard H. Brownstein is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Yeast artificial chromosome & Gene. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 57 publications receiving 9215 citations. Previous affiliations of Bernard H. Brownstein include University of Florida & University of California, San Francisco.

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Genomic responses in mouse models poorly mimic human inflammatory diseases

TL;DR: This study shows that, although acute inflammatory stresses from different etiologies result in highly similar genomic responses in humans, the responses in corresponding mouse models correlate poorly with the human conditions and also, one another.
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A network-based analysis of systemic inflammation in humans

TL;DR: This work explores the known genome-wide interaction network to identify significant functional modules perturbed in response to an inflammatory stimulus and reveals that the human blood leukocyte response to acute systemic inflammation includes the transient dysregulation of leukocytes bioenergetics and modulation of translational machinery.
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Type 1 neurofibromatosis gene: identification of a large transcript disrupted in three NF1 patients

TL;DR: The use of chromosome jumping and yeast artificial chromosome technology has now led to the identification of a large (approximately 13 kilobases) ubiquitously expressed transcript (denoted NF1LT) from this region that is definitely interrupted by one and most likely by both translocations, suggesting that NF1 LT represents the elusive NF1 gene.
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A genomic storm in critically injured humans

Wenzhong Xiao, +96 more
TL;DR: It is shown that critical injury in humans induces a genomic storm with simultaneous changes in expression of innate and adaptive immunity genes that alter the status of these genes in the immune system.
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Isolation of single-copy human genes from a library of yeast artificial chromosome clones.

TL;DR: Two single-copy genes have now been cloned from a library of yeast artificial chromosome clones that was prepared from total human DNA, and appear to contain faithful replicas of human DNA.