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George P. Daston

Researcher at Procter & Gamble

Publications -  32
Citations -  4552

George P. Daston is an academic researcher from Procter & Gamble. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 24 publications receiving 4106 citations. Previous affiliations of George P. Daston include Salk Institute for Biological Studies & University of Konstanz.

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Correlation of chemical structure with reproductive and developmental toxicity as it relates to the use of the threshold of toxicological concern

TL;DR: This work expands the database of chemicals with reproductive and developmental data, presents these data in a comprehensive and transparent format and groups the chemicals according to the TTC "Cramer Class" rules.
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Alternative (non-animal) methods for cosmetics testing: current status and future prospects—2010

TL;DR: In this paper, Adler et al. present a survey of the authors' work in the field of bioinformatics, including the following authors:Sarah AdlerDavid BasketterStuart CretonOlavi PelkonenJan van BenthemValerie Zuang • Klaus Ejner AndersenAlexandre Angers-LoustauAynur AptulaAnna Bal-PriceEmilio Benfenati • Ulrike BernauerJos BessemsFrederic Y. BoisAlan BoobisEsther BrandonSusanne Bremer • Thomas
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Identification and Characterization of Toxicity of Contaminants in Pet Food Leading to an Outbreak of Renal Toxicity in Cats and Dogs

TL;DR: The causal link between the contaminated gluten and the adverse effects of melamine and cyanuric acid is established and a mechanistic explanation for how two apparently innocuous compounds could have adverse effects in combination is provided.
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Toxicogenomics in regulatory ecotoxicology.

TL;DR: Roles of toxicogenomics in the field of regulatory ecotoxicology are considered, current limitations in the science and practice of genomics are explored, and possible avenues to approach and resolve some of the major challenges are proposed.
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Pax-3 is necessary for migration but not differentiation of limb muscle precursors in the mouse

TL;DR: Results indicate that Pax-3 regulates the migration of limb muscle precursors into the limb and is not required for cells in the lateral somite to differentiate into muscle.