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Mark A. LaBarge

Researcher at Beckman Research Institute

Publications -  99
Citations -  5410

Mark A. LaBarge is an academic researcher from Beckman Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stem cell & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 85 publications receiving 4559 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark A. LaBarge include Stanford University & University of Bergen.

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Biological Progression from Adult Bone Marrow to Mononucleate Muscle Stem Cell to Multinucleate Muscle Fiber in Response to Injury

TL;DR: The results suggest that two temporally distinct injury-related signals first induce BMDC to occupy the muscle stem cell niche and then to help regenerate mature muscle fibers, due to developmental plasticity in response to environmental cues.
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Extracellular Vesicle and Particle Biomarkers Define Multiple Human Cancers

Ayuko Hoshino, +136 more
- 20 Aug 2020 - 
TL;DR: EVP proteins can serve as reliable biomarkers for cancer detection and determining cancer type, and a panel of tumor-type-specific EVP proteins in TEs and plasma are defined, which can classify tumors of unknown primary origin.
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Context, tissue plasticity, and cancer: Are tumor stem cells also regulated by the microenvironment?

TL;DR: It is shown that within every higher organism, there are literally billions of cells with identical genetic information that serve as constituents of the different tissues and organs, such that each cell knows exactly which commands to execute at any given time.
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Evidence for a stem cell hierarchy in the adult human breast.

TL;DR: An adult human breast ductal stem cell activity and its earliest descendants are identified and the four cell types assessed are constituents of an as of yet undescribed stem cell hierarchy.
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The Library of Integrated Network-Based Cellular Signatures NIH Program: System-Level Cataloging of Human Cells Response to Perturbations

Alexandra B Keenan, +107 more
- 29 Nov 2017 - 
TL;DR: The LINCS program focuses on cellular physiology shared among tissues and cell types relevant to an array of diseases, including cancer, heart disease, and neurodegenerative disorders.