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Monisha Samuel

Researcher at La Trobe University

Publications -  15
Citations -  2586

Monisha Samuel is an academic researcher from La Trobe University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Microvesicles & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 14 publications receiving 1678 citations. Previous affiliations of Monisha Samuel include Karolinska Institutet & Karolinska University Hospital.

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ExoCarta: A Web-Based Compendium of Exosomal Cargo

TL;DR: ExoCarta is described, a manually curated Web-based compendium of exosomal proteins, RNAs and lipids, which features dynamic protein-protein interaction networks and biological pathways of exOSomal proteins.
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EV-TRACK: transparent reporting and centralizing knowledge in extracellular vesicle research

Jan Van Deun, +101 more
- 01 Mar 2017 - 
TL;DR: It is argued that the field of extracellular vesicle (EV) biology needs more transparent reporting to facilitate interpretation and replication of experiments and EV-TRACK, a crowdsourcing knowledgebase that centralizes EV biology and methodology, is described.
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Ticket to a bubble ride: Cargo sorting into exosomes and extracellular vesicles

TL;DR: This article offers a brief overview of the molecular mechanisms that are known to regulate sorting of various molecules into EVs and discusses how different pathways of biogenesis alter the exosomal cargo as well and the implications of the cellular state on the content of the EVs.
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CAF hierarchy driven by pancreatic cancer cell p53-status creates a pro-metastatic and chemoresistant environment via perlecan

TL;DR: It is revealed that depleting perlecan in the stroma combined with chemotherapy prolongs mouse survival, supporting it as a potential target for anti-stromal therapies in pancreatic cancer and identifying perle can as a mediator of the pro-metastatic environment.
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Bovine milk-derived exosomes from colostrum are enriched with proteins implicated in immune response and growth.

TL;DR: The importance of exosomes in colostrum is highlighted and opens up new avenues to exploit these vesicles in the regulation of the immune response and growth.