E
Emmanuel Andrès
Researcher at University of Strasbourg
Publications - 574
Citations - 10348
Emmanuel Andrès is an academic researcher from University of Strasbourg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cobalamin & Vitamin B12. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 546 publications receiving 8733 citations. Previous affiliations of Emmanuel Andrès include Katholieke Universiteit Leuven & Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
CD56bright natural killer (NK) cells: an important NK cell subset
TL;DR: The CD56bright NK cell subset is reviewed, which is numerically in the minority in peripheral blood but constitute the majority of NK cells in secondary lymphoid tissues and may have immunoregulatory properties.
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Vitamin B12 (cobalamin) deficiency in elderly patients
Emmanuel Andrès,Noureddine Henoun Loukili,Esther Noel,Georges Kaltenbach,Maher Ben Abdelgheni,A.E. Perrin,M. Noblet-Dick,Frédéric Maloisel,Jean-Louis Schlienger,Jean-Frédéric Blicklé +9 more
TL;DR: The epidemiology and causes of cobalamin deficiency in elderly people, with an emphasis on food-cobalamin malabsorption syndrome, are reviewed, and diagnostic and management strategies for cobalamina deficiency are reviewed.
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Virulence factors of the human opportunistic pathogen Serratia marcescens identified by in vivo screening
C. Léopold Kurz,Sophie Chauvet,Emmanuel Andrès,Marianne Aurouze,Isabelle Vallet,Gérard Michel,Mitch Uh,Jean Celli,Alain Filloux,Sophie de Bentzmann,Ivo Steinmetz,Jules A. Hoffmann,B. Brett Finlay,Jean-Pierre Gorvel,Dominique Ferrandon,Jonathan J. Ewbank +15 more
TL;DR: The utility of C.elegans as an in vivo model for the study of bacterial virulence and the identification of novel conserved virulence factors required for Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenicity are extended and advances the molecular understanding of S.marcescens pathogenicicity.
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Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura in a Patient with Covid-19.
TL;DR: The main findings are that immune thrombocytopenia with lower-extremity purpura, mucosal bleeding, and cerebral microhemorrhage developed during the clinical course in a 65-year-old woman with central giant cell granuloma.
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An update on cobalamin deficiency in adults
TL;DR: Mutations in genes encoding endocytic receptors involved in the ileal absorption and cellular uptake of cobalamin have been recently uncovered and explain, at least in part, the hereditary component of megaloblastic anemia.