scispace - formally typeset
C

Carsten Schlüter

Researcher at University of Kiel

Publications -  14
Citations -  2853

Carsten Schlüter is an academic researcher from University of Kiel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eotaxin & Gene. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 14 publications receiving 2794 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Monoclonal antibodies against recombinant parts of the ki-67 antigen (mib 1 and mib 3) detect proliferating cells in microwave-processed formalin-fixed paraffin sections

TL;DR: The assessment of cell kinetics through the detection of Ki‐67 antigen is now possible on archival material collected in histopathology departments all over the world because this new method is highly reproducible, easy to perform at low cost, and no additional technical skill is needed after microwave treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cell proliferation-associated antigen of antibody Ki-67: a very large, ubiquitous nuclear protein with numerous repeated elements, representing a new kind of cell cycle-maintaining proteins.

TL;DR: Computer analysis of the nucleic acid and the deduced amino acid sequence of the Ki-67 antigen confirmed that the cDNA encodes for a nuclear and short-lived protein without any significant homology to known sequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human dermal fibroblasts express eotaxin : molecular cloning, mrna expression, and identification of eotaxin sequence variants

TL;DR: Semi-quantitative RT-PCR experiments indicate low constitutive eotaxin mRNA expression in human dermal fibroblasts which is upregulated by IL-1 alpha and TNF-alpha within 6 hrs and modulated by IFN-gamma.
Journal ArticleDOI

The CXC receptor 2 is overexpressed in psoriatic epidermis

TL;DR: Activation of keratinocytes mediated by CXCR2 could contribute to the characteristic epidermal changes observed in psoriasis, suggest data suggest.
Journal ArticleDOI

New antiserum against Ki-67 antigen suitable for double immunostaining of paraffin wax sections.

TL;DR: After antigen unmasking by microwave treatment the antiserum described here represents a powerful tool for the determination of growth fractions even in archival material, especially suitable for double staining experiments in combination with monoclonal antibodies.