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Moriel H. Vandsburger

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  61
Citations -  893

Moriel H. Vandsburger is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Reporter gene. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 57 publications receiving 674 citations. Previous affiliations of Moriel H. Vandsburger include University of Kentucky & Weizmann Institute of Science.

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Noninvasive assessment of pancreatic β-cell function in vivo with manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging

TL;DR: Mn(2+)-enhanced MRI demonstrates excellent potential as a means for noninvasively monitoring beta-cell function in vivo and may have the sensitivity to detect progressive decreases in function that occur in the diabetic disease process.
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The NIH Somatic Cell Genome Editing program

Krishanu Saha, +79 more
- 07 Apr 2021 - 
TL;DR: The United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) Somatic Cell Genome Editing (SCGE) Consortium aims to accelerate the development of safer and more effective methods to edit the genomes of disease-relevant somatic cells in patients, even in tissues that are difficult to reach as discussed by the authors.
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MRI reporter genes: applications for imaging of cell survival, proliferation, migration and differentiation

TL;DR: A variety of MRI reporter gene methods are characterized based on their applicability to report cell survival/proliferation, migration and differentiation, and which methods were best suited for translation to clinical use in regenerative therapies are discussed.
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Improved arterial spin labeling after myocardial infarction in mice using cardiac and respiratory gated look-locker imaging with fuzzy C-means clustering.

TL;DR: A cardiorespiratory‐gated arterial spin labeling sequence using a fuzzy C‐means algorithm to retrospectively reconstruct images was developed, which will allow for the investigation of the roles of specific genes in myocardial perfusion during infarct healing.
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Multi-parameter in vivo cardiac magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates normal perfusion reserve despite severely attenuated β-adrenergic functional response in neuronal nitric oxide synthase knockout mice

TL;DR: MRI provides non-invasive in vivo evidence that nNOS does not play a role in basal contractile function or myocardial perfusion, but is required for increasing cardiac inotropy and lusitropy upon beta-adrenergic stimulation.