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Jane D. Funkhouser

Researcher at University of South Alabama

Publications -  20
Citations -  547

Jane D. Funkhouser is an academic researcher from University of South Alabama. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phospholipid transfer protein & Phosphatidylcholine. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications receiving 518 citations.

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Chitinase family GH18: evolutionary insights from the genomic history of a diverse protein family

TL;DR: Find that the human GH18 gene family is closely linked to the human major histocompatibility complex paralogon on chromosome 1, together with the recent association of GH18 chitinase activity with Th2 cell inflammation, suggests that its late expansion could be related to an emerging interface of innate and adaptive immunity during early vertebrate history.
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Monoclonal antibody identification of a type II alveolar epithelial cell antigen and expression of the antigen during lung development.

TL;DR: Preliminary studies of the binding of the antibody to other rat tissues indicate that the antibody binds to renal proximal tubular epithel cells of the kidney and the luminal surface of the small bowel epithelial cells.
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An organ culture system for study of fetal lung development.

TL;DR: The phosphatidylcholine species synthesized in the culture system in vitro were similar to those produced in vivo in fetal lung at 21 days gestation and Glycogen accumulated in the tissue during the first six days in culture and was depleted during the subsequent culture period.
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Properties of a non-specific phospholipid-transfer protein purified from rat lung.

TL;DR: The specificity of the purified protein for transfer of phospholipids suggests that it may be theospholipid-transfer activity which is highly enriched in isolated type II alveolar cells of rat lung.
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Speculations on ataxia-telangiectasia: defective regulation of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily

TL;DR: The argument that the common molecular mechanism linking the various clinical manifestations of ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) is a defect in the regulation of the immunoglobulin (Ig) gene superfamily is developed.