M
Mary C. Whitman
Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital
Publications - 41
Citations - 2199
Mary C. Whitman is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Subventricular zone & Axon. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 38 publications receiving 1928 citations. Previous affiliations of Mary C. Whitman include Columbia University & Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Dynamic contribution of nestin-expressing stem cells to adult neurogenesis.
Diane C. Lagace,Mary C. Whitman,Michele A. Noonan,Jessica L. Ables,Nathan A. DeCarolis,Amy A. Arguello,Michael H. Donovan,Stephanie J. Fischer,Laure A. Farnbauch,Robert D. Beech,Ralph J. DiLeone,Charles A. Greer,Chitra D. Mandyam,Amelia J. Eisch +13 more
TL;DR: The utility of the nestin-CreERT2/R26R-YFP mouse for inducible gene ablation in stem cells and their progeny in vivo in the two major regions of adult neurogenesis is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI
Adult neurogenesis and the olfactory system.
Mary C. Whitman,Charles A. Greer +1 more
TL;DR: Recent advances in the biology of neural stem cells, mechanisms of migration in the RMS and olfactory bulb, differentiation and survival of new neurons, and finally mechanisms of synaptic integration are reviewed.
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Disulfide bond-mediated dimerization of HLA-G on the cell surface
Jonathan E. Boyson,Robert A. Erskine,Mary C. Whitman,Michael Chiu,Julie M. Lau,Louise A. Koopman,Markus M. Valter,Pavla Angelisova,Vaclav Horejsi,Jack L. Strominger +9 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that HLA-G forms disulfide-linked dimers that are present on the cell surface, which may have implications for H LA-G/receptor interactions and for the search for specific receptors that bind Hla-G.
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Blood vessels form a migratory scaffold in the rostral migratory stream
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantitatively examined the distribution and relationships between cells within the Rostral Migratory Stream (RMS) throughout its rostral-caudal extent.
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Synaptic Integration of Adult-Generated Olfactory Bulb Granule Cells: Basal Axodendritic Centrifugal Input Precedes Apical Dendrodendritic Local Circuits
Mary C. Whitman,Charles A. Greer +1 more
TL;DR: Data suggest that adult-generated granule cells are first innervated by centrifugal or mitral/tufted cell axon collaterals in the GCL and that these inputs may contribute to their differentiation, maturation, and synaptic integration into the dendrodendritic local circuits found in the EPL.