M
Martin J. Blaser
Researcher at Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine
Publications - 841
Citations - 114575
Martin J. Blaser is an academic researcher from Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Helicobacter pylori & CagA. The author has an hindex of 147, co-authored 820 publications receiving 104104 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin J. Blaser include Nagoya University & University of Maryland, Baltimore.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Translating microbiome futures.
Gaspar Taroncher-Oldenburg,Susan M. Jones,Martin J. Blaser,Richard Bonneau,Peter Christey,Jose C. Clemente,Eran Elinav,Elodie Ghedin,Curtis Huttenhower,Denise Kelly,David Kyle,Dan R. Littman,Arpita Maiti,Alexander Maue,Bernat Olle,Leopoldo N. Segal,Johan Van Hylckama Vlieg,Jun Wang +17 more
TL;DR: A group of microbiome researchers discuss some of the challenges in developing a new generation of microbiome therapies and the potential benefits and risks of using these therapies in clinical practice.
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T-cell, antibody, and cytokine responses to homologs of the 60-kilodalton heat shock protein in Helicobacter pylori infection.
TL;DR: There is an apparent difference in the epitopes recognized by the T and B cells responding to H. pylori hsp60 in H.pylori-infected persons, and a specific B-cell response that may have cross-reactivity to human hsp 60 is evident in some infected subjects.
Journal Article
Serum antibodies to Giardia lamblia by age in populations in Colorado and Thailand.
TL;DR: Serum levels of G lamblia-specific IgM may reflect exposure to the parasite early in life in both areas, although children in Soongnern showed significantly higher mean levels of each antibody class (P less than .05).
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A two-stage microbial association mapping framework with advanced FDR control
TL;DR: A two-stage microbial association mapping framework which uses grouping information from the taxonomic tree to strengthen statistical power in association tests at the target rank and achieves additional efficiency by utilizing the intrinsic taxonomic structure of microbiome data is proposed.
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An outbreak of salmonellosis involving multiple vehicles
TL;DR: The occurrence of illness over a seven-week period, the implication of several vehicles, and the demonstration of secondary cases suggest that "sporadic" cases of salmonellosis in the community may be linked.