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David F. Smith

Researcher at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Publications -  105
Citations -  4872

David F. Smith is an academic researcher from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Obstructive sleep apnea & Polysomnography. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 99 publications receiving 4040 citations. Previous affiliations of David F. Smith include Johns Hopkins University & University of Virginia.

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Circulating activated platelets exacerbate atherosclerosis in mice deficient in apolipoprotein E

TL;DR: The results indicate that circulating activated platelets and platelet–leukocyte/monocyte aggregates promote formation of atherosclerotic lesions.
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Critical role of endothelial CXCR2 in LPS-induced neutrophil migration into the lung

TL;DR: The data revealed what is believed to be a previously unrecognized role of endothelial and epithelial CXCR2 in LPS-induced PMN recruitment and lung injury.
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Structure of the large FK506-binding protein FKBP51, an Hsp90-binding protein and a component of steroid receptor complexes

TL;DR: This structure of a multi-FKBP domain protein clarifies the arrangement of these domains and their possible interactions with other proteins, and reports here the x-ray structures of human and squirrel monkey FKBP51, to 2.7 Å.
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A pathway of multi-chaperone interactions common to diverse regulatory proteins: estrogen receptor, Fes tyrosine kinase, heat shock transcription factor Hsf1, and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor.

TL;DR: Target proteins other than progesterone receptor were used in this cell-free system to assemble complexes in vitro and to compare the composition of resulting complexes, suggesting that each of these targets undergoes a common assembly pathway involving multiple chaperone components in addition to Hsp90.
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Human papillomavirus-related carcinomas of the sinonasal tract.

TL;DR: The presence of high-risk HPV in 21% of sinonasal carcinomas confirms HPV as an important oncologic agent of carcinomas arising in the sin onasal tract.