C
Christian G. Schüttler
Researcher at University of Giessen
Publications - 43
Citations - 1699
Christian G. Schüttler is an academic researcher from University of Giessen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatitis B virus & HBsAg. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1557 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
microRNA-122 stimulates translation of hepatitis C virus RNA
Jura Inga Henke,Dagmar Goergen,Junfeng Zheng,Yutong Song,Christian G. Schüttler,Carmen Fehr,Christiane Jünemann,Michael Niepmann +7 more
TL;DR: The liver‐specific miR‐122 may contribute to HCV liver tropism at the level of translation by enhancing the association of ribosomes with the viral RNA at an early initiation stage.
Journal ArticleDOI
Suppression of hepatitis B virus enhancer 1 and 2 by hepatitis C virus core protein.
Christian G. Schüttler,Nicola Fiedler,Katja Schmidt,Reinald Repp,Wolfram H. Gerlich,Stephan Schaefer,Stephan Schaefer +6 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that HCV core protein may directly repress transcription of the HBV RNAs, which may contribute to suppression of HBV replication in patients coinfected with both viruses.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hepatitis C virus transmission by a blood donation negative in nucleic acid amplification tests for viral RNA
Christian G. Schüttler,Gregor Caspari,Christian A Jursch,Wulf R. Willems,Wolfram H. Gerlich,Stephan Schaefer +5 more
TL;DR: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) was transmitted by transfusion of a platelet concentrate made from an anti-HCV and HCV-PCR-negative blood donation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Occult hepatitis B virus infection: detection and significance.
Wolfram H. Gerlich,Corinna M. Bremer,Mona Saniewski,Christian G. Schüttler,Ulrike C. Wend,Wulf R. Willems,Dieter Glebe +6 more
TL;DR: Nine cases of OBI or reactivated HBV infections often lead to selection of HBsAg escape mutations as it could show in 11 of 14 cases, and HB vaccination may solve the problem of overt HBV infection but may favor OBI.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acute epididymitis revisited: impact of molecular diagnostics on etiology and contemporary guideline recommendations.
Adrian Pilatz,Hamid Hossain,Rolf Kaiser,Annette Mankertz,Christian G. Schüttler,Eugen Domann,Hans-Christian Schuppe,Trinad Chakraborty,Wolfgang Weidner,Florian M.E. Wagenlehner +9 more
TL;DR: Even in antimicrobially pretreated patients, acute epididymitis is mainly of bacterial origin, and current guideline recommendations on empirical antimicrobial therapy are adequate.