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Dimitrios J. Stravopodis

Researcher at National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

Publications -  100
Citations -  10946

Dimitrios J. Stravopodis is an academic researcher from National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. The author has contributed to research in topics: Programmed cell death & Nurse cell. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 94 publications receiving 10150 citations. Previous affiliations of Dimitrios J. Stravopodis include Athens State University & St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

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Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (3rd edition)

Daniel J. Klionsky, +2522 more
- 21 Jan 2016 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a set of guidelines for the selection and interpretation of methods for use by investigators who aim to examine macro-autophagy and related processes, as well as for reviewers who need to provide realistic and reasonable critiques of papers that are focused on these processes.
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Stat5a and Stat5b Proteins Have Essential and Nonessential, or Redundant, Roles in Cytokine Responses

TL;DR: The phenotypes of the mice demonstrate an essential, and often redundant, role for the two Stat5 proteins in a spectrum of physiological responses associated with growth hormone and prolactin.
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Jak2 Is Essential for Signaling through a Variety of Cytokine Receptors

TL;DR: Reconstitution experiments demonstrate that Jak2 is not required for the generation of lymphoid progenitors, their amplification, or functional differentiation, and plays a critical, nonredundant role in the function of a specific group of cytokines receptors.
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SOCS1 Deficiency Causes a Lymphocyte-Dependent Perinatal Lethality

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that lymphocytes are critical to SOCS1-associated perinatal lethality and implicate SOCS 1 in lymphocyte differentiation or regulation and Introducing a RAG2 or IFNgamma deficiency eliminates lethality.
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Naturally occurring dominant negative variants of Stat5

TL;DR: The results demonstrate the natural existence of potentially dominantly suppressive variants of Stat5 and implicate the carboxyl domain of Stats in transcriptional regulation and functions related to dephosphorylation and Surprisingly, the tyrosine phosphorylation of the car Box5 forms is considerably more stable than that of the wild-type proteins.