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Kari Alitalo

Researcher at University of Helsinki

Publications -  844
Citations -  122462

Kari Alitalo is an academic researcher from University of Helsinki. The author has contributed to research in topics: Angiogenesis & Vascular endothelial growth factor C. The author has an hindex of 174, co-authored 817 publications receiving 114231 citations. Previous affiliations of Kari Alitalo include Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto & Cornell University.

Papers
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Mapping of amplified c-myb oncogene, sister chromatid exchanges, and karyotypic analysis of the COLO 205 colon carcinoma cell line

TL;DR: It is suggested that c-myb was amplified in situ in a chromosomal segment (6q22-24) that became a part of the marker chromosome, possibly through isochromosome formation followed by duplication, and without the extrachromosomal intermediate form of double minute chromosomes.
Patent

Antibodies to VEGF-C

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provided a list of VEGF-C polypeptides capable of binding to at least one of KDR receptor tyrosine kinase (VEGFR-2) and Flt4-RHTK-3.
Journal Article

Similar early gene responses to ligand-activated EGFR and neu tyrosine kinases in NIH3T3 cells.

TL;DR: Compared the responses of serum-inducible immediate early genes to ligand activation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or a hybrid EGFR/neu receptor containing the intracellular domain of the neu proto-oncogene, few differences in mRNA induction kinetics were found.
Journal ArticleDOI

The c-src tyrosine kinase (CSK) gene, a potential antioncogene, localizes to human chromosome region 15q23→q25

TL;DR: The cloning of a novel cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase, CSK, and the mapping of the CSK gene to 15q23----q25 by in situ hybridization to potentially function as an antioncogene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intrachromosomal rearrangements fusing L-myc and rlf in small-cell lung cancer.

TL;DR: The presence of independent genetic lesions that cause the formation of identical chimeric rlf-L-myc proteins suggests a role for the fusion protein in the development of these tumors.