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Michael McClelland

Researcher at University of California, Irvine

Publications -  376
Citations -  29109

Michael McClelland is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Salmonella enterica & Salmonella. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 372 publications receiving 27627 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael McClelland include University of Illinois at Chicago & University of Georgia.

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Flagellin Fusion Proteins as Adjuvants or Vaccines Induce Specific Immune Responses

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a flagellin-EGFP fusion protein is capable of stimulating APCs, resulting in the maturation of these cells and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, and recombinant-flageLLin fusion proteins may be suitable carriers as adjuvants or vaccines for the development of new vaccination strategies to induce and boost immune responses against infectious diseases and cancer.
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Global regulation by CsrA in Salmonella typhimurium.

TL;DR: Results show that csrA controls a number of gene classes in addition to those required for invasion, some of them unique to Salmonella, and suggests a co‐ordinated bacterial response to conditions that exist at the site of bacterial invasion, the intestinal tract of a host animal.
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Identification of promoters bound by c-Jun/ATF2 during rapid large-scale gene activation following genotoxic stress.

TL;DR: The genotoxic stress response occurs at least partly via activation of ATF2 and c-Jun, leading to large-scale coordinate gene expression dominated by genes of DNA repair within 3-6 hr of cisplatin treatment.
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Genome Sequence of Cronobacter sakazakii BAA-894 and Comparative Genomic Hybridization Analysis with Other Cronobacter Species

TL;DR: A number of genes unique to Cronobacter species associated with neonatal infections (C. sakazakii, C. malonaticus and C. turicensis) were identified and included a copper and silver resistance system known to be linked to invasion of the blood-brain barrier by neonatal meningitic strains of Escherichia coli.