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Gautam Chaudhuri

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  153
Citations -  13514

Gautam Chaudhuri is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene expression & Apoptosis. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 153 publications receiving 12897 citations. Previous affiliations of Gautam Chaudhuri include Naval Medical Center San Diego & Meharry Medical College.

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Endothelium-derived relaxing factor produced and released from artery and vein is nitric oxide.

TL;DR: The vascular effects of EDRF released from perfused bovine intrapulmonary artery and vein were compared with the effects of NO delivered by superfusion over endothelium-denuded arterial and venous strips arranged in a cascade to determine whether nitric oxide (NO) is responsible for the vascular smooth muscle relaxation elicited by endothelia-derived relaxing factor (EDRF).
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DICER1 deficit induces Alu RNA toxicity in age-related macular degeneration

TL;DR: Findings reveal a miRNA-independent cell survival function for DICER1 involving retrotransposon transcript degradation, show that Alu RNA can directly cause human pathology, and identify new targets for a major cause of blindness.
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Basal release of nitric oxide from aortic rings is greater in female rabbits than in male rabbits: implications for atherosclerosis

TL;DR: It is established that basal NO release from endothelium-intact aortic rings depends on circulating estradiol concentration and offers an explanation for the protective effect of estradio against the development of atherosclerosis.
Journal Article

Pharmacological evidence that endothelium-derived relaxing factor is nitric oxide: use of pyrogallol and superoxide dismutase to study endothelium-dependent and nitric oxide-elicited vascular smooth muscle relaxation.

TL;DR: Both pyrogallol and oxyhemoglobin enhanced arterial contractile responsiveness to phenylephrine in an endothelium-dependent manner, whereas indomethacin was without effect.