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Gregory J. Goodall

Researcher at University of South Australia

Publications -  158
Citations -  19763

Gregory J. Goodall is an academic researcher from University of South Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: microRNA & Regulation of gene expression. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 153 publications receiving 16952 citations. Previous affiliations of Gregory J. Goodall include University of Adelaide & Kunming University of Science and Technology.

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The miR-200 family and miR-205 regulate epithelial to mesenchymal transition by targeting ZEB1 and SIP1.

TL;DR: It is found that all five members of the microRNA-200 family were markedly downregulated in cells that had undergone EMT in response to transforming growth factor (TGF)-β or to ectopic expression of the protein tyrosine phosphatase Pez, suggesting that downregulation of themicroRNAs may be an important step in tumour progression.
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The RNA binding protein quaking regulates formation of circRNAs.

TL;DR: It is shown that hundreds of circRNAs are regulated during human epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and that the production of over one-third of abundant circ RNAs is dynamically regulated by the alternative splicing factor, Quaking (QKI), which itself is regulated during EMT.
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A Double-Negative Feedback Loop between ZEB1-SIP1 and the microRNA-200 Family Regulates Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition

TL;DR: A double-negative feedback loop controlling ZEB1-SIP1 and miR-200 family expression that regulates cellular phenotype is established and has direct relevance to the role of these factors in tumor progression.
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Guidelines and definitions for research on epithelial–mesenchymal transition

Jing Yang, +47 more
TL;DR: This Consensus Statement is the outcome of a 2-year-long discussion among EMT researchers and aims to both clarify the nomenclature and provide definitions and guidelines for EMT research in future publications to reduce misunderstanding and misinterpretation of research data generated in various experimental models.
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RNA in cancer.

TL;DR: The regulation of gene expression by coding and non-coding RNA is introduced and both established and emerging roles for RNAs in cancer are discussed, highlighting the potential mechanisms by which these RNA subtypes contribute to cancer.