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
Complete Genome Sequence of Campylobacter fetus subsp. testudinum Strain 03-427T.
Maarten J. Gilbert,William G. Miller,Emma Yee,Martin J. Blaser,Jaap A. Wagenaar,Jaap A. Wagenaar,Birgitta Duim +6 more
TL;DR: The first whole-genome sequence for this C. fetus subspecies is presented and it is shown that this Campylobacter sub species is genetically distinct from other C. testudinum subspecies.
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Serological Assays for Identification of Human Gastric Colonization by Helicobacter pylori Strains Expressing VacA m1 or m2
Chandrabali Ghose,Guillermo I. Perez-Perez,Victor J. Torres,Marialuisa Crosatti,Abraham M. Y. Nomura,Richard M. Peek,Timothy L. Cover,Timothy L. Cover,Fritz Francois,Fritz Francois,Martin J. Blaser,Martin J. Blaser +11 more
TL;DR: Serological responses to VacA m region-specific antigens were not able to predict the risk of development of gastric cancer in an Asian-American population.
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WHAM!: a web-based visualization suite for user-defined analysis of metagenomic shotgun sequencing data
TL;DR: The Workflow Hub for Automated Metagenomic Exploration (WHAM!) is a web-based interactive tool capable of user-directed data visualization and statistical analysis of annotated shotgun metagenomic and metatranscriptomic data sets to facilitate discovery in multi-dimensional and large-scale data sets.
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Microbial Causation of the Chronic Idiopathic Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
TL;DR: If the IBDs are due to microbial agents, then the numerous immunological abnormalities observed are thus secondary phenomena, and the development of a more comprehensive knowledge base of the microbiology of the human intestine in general, and of IBD patients in particular, is most needed for advances to be made toward cure.
Journal Article
Risk factors for SARS-CoV-2 infection in hospital workers: results from a screening study in New Jersey, U.S. in Spring 2020
Emily S. Barrett,Daniel B. Horton,Reilly, Nancy, Uprety, Priyanka, Gantner, John J.,Stockman, Lydia, Trooskin, Stanley Z.,Martin J. Blaser,Jeffrey L. Carson,Reynold A. Panettieri +6 more
TL;DR: The HCW categories at highest risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection include support staff and underrepresented minorities with and without patient care responsibilities, and Black and Latinx workers had 2-fold increased odds of a positive test compared with white workers.