D
Daniel Surbek
Researcher at University of Bern
Publications - 266
Citations - 7035
Daniel Surbek is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Stem cell. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 239 publications receiving 5946 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Surbek include University of Basel & University Hospital of Bern.
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Concise review: isolation and characterization of cells from human term placenta: outcome of the first international Workshop on Placenta Derived Stem Cells.
Ornella Parolini,Francesco Alviano,Gian Paolo Bagnara,Grozdana Bilic,Hans-Jörg Bühring,Marco Evangelista,Simone Hennerbichler,Bing Liu,Marta Magatti,Ning Mao,Toshio Miki,Fabio Marongiu,Hideaki Nakajima,Toshio Nikaido,C. Bettina Portmann-Lanz,Venkatachalam Sankar,Maddalena Soncini,Guido Stadler,Daniel Surbek,Tsuneo A. Takahashi,Heinz Redl,Norio Sakuragawa,Susanne Wolbank,Steffen M. Zeisberger,Andreas H. Zisch,Stephen C. Strom +25 more
TL;DR: The aim of this review is to summarize and provide the state of the art of research in this field, addressing aspects such as cell isolation protocols and characteristics of these cells, as well as providing preliminary indications of the possibilities for use ofThese cells in future clinical applications.
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Placental mesenchymal stem cells as potential autologous graft for pre- and perinatal neuroregeneration
C. Bettina Portmann-Lanz,Andreina Schoeberlein,Alexander W. Huber,Ruth Sager,Antoine Malek,Wolfgang Holzgreve,Daniel Surbek +6 more
TL;DR: MSCs isolated from fetal membranes and placenta showed typical MSC phenotype and were able to differentiate into mesodermal cells expressing cell markers/cytologic staining consistent with mature chondroblasts, osteoblasts, adipocytes, or myocytes and into neuronal cells presenting markers of various stages of maturation.
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Exosomes derived from umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells reduce microglia-mediated neuroinflammation in perinatal brain injury.
Gierin Florence Thomi,Daniel Surbek,Valérie Haesler,Marianne Joerger-Messerli,Andreina Schoeberlein +4 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that the administration of hWJ-MSC-derived exosomes represents a promising therapy to prevent and treat perinatal brain injury.
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Toward cell therapy using placenta-derived cells: disease mechanisms, cell biology, preclinical studies, and regulatory aspects at the round table.
Ornella Parolini,Francesco Alviano,Irene Bergwerf,Diana Boraschi,Cosimo De Bari,Peter De Waele,Massimo Dominici,Marco Evangelista,Werner Falk,Simone Hennerbichler,David C. Hess,Giacomo Lanzoni,Bing Liu,Fabio Marongiu,Colin McGuckin,Stefan Mohr,Maria Luisa Nolli,Racheli Ofir,Peter Ponsaerts,Luca Romagnoli,Abraham Solomon,Maddalena Soncini,Stephen C. Strom,Daniel Surbek,Sankar Venkatachalam,Sankar Venkatachalam,Susanne Wolbank,Steffen M. Zeisberger,Andy Zeitlin,Andreas H. Zisch,Cesar V. Borlongan +30 more
TL;DR: The international workshop held in Brescia, Italy, in March 2009 aimed to harness an understanding of basic inflammatory mechanisms inherent in human diseases with updated findings regarding biological and therapeutic properties of human placenta-derived cells, with particular emphasis on their potential for treating inflammatory diseases.
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First-trimester serum levels of soluble endoglin and soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 as first-trimester markers for late-onset preeclampsia
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assessed soluble endoglin (sEng) and soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt1) as first-trimester serum markers to predict preeclampsia.