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Bruce N. Ames

Researcher at Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute

Publications -  506
Citations -  132778

Bruce N. Ames is an academic researcher from Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: DNA damage & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 158, co-authored 506 publications receiving 129010 citations. Previous affiliations of Bruce N. Ames include Boston Children's Hospital & Laboratory of Molecular Biology.

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Methods for detecting carcinogens and mutagens with the salmonella/mammalian-microsome mutagenicity test

TL;DR: The methods described include the standard plate test, the use and storage of the bacterial tester strains, preparation and use of the liver homogenates, and the methods of inducing the rats for elevated microsomal enzyme activity.
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Revised methods for the salmonella mutagenicity test

TL;DR: Two new tester strains, a frameshift strain and a strain carrying an ochre mutation on a multicopy plasmid (TA102), are added to the standard tester set and two substitutions are made in diagnostic mutagens to eliminate MNNG and 9-aminoacridine.
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Oxidants, antioxidants, and the degenerative diseases of aging

TL;DR: It is argued that this damage to DNA, protein, and lipid is a major contributor to aging and to degenerative diseases of aging such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, immune-system decline, brain dysfunction, and cataracts.
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A Method for Determining the Sedimentation Behavior of Enzymes: Application to Protein Mixtures

TL;DR: Sucrose gradient centrifugation is found to be a suitable method for determining sedimentation coefficients of enzymes in protein mixtures and the sedimentation behavior of several of the enzymes in the pathway of histidine biosynthesis in S. typhimurium has been determined.
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The Free Radical Theory of Aging Matures

TL;DR: The status of the free radical theory of aging is reviewed, by categorizing the literature in terms of the various types of experiments that have been performed, which include phenomenological measurements of age-associated oxidative stress, interspecies comparisons, dietary restriction, and the ongoing elucidation of the role of active oxygen in biology.