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Neil R. Smalheiser

Researcher at University of Illinois at Chicago

Publications -  183
Citations -  9534

Neil R. Smalheiser is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neurite & MEDLINE. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 179 publications receiving 8933 citations. Previous affiliations of Neil R. Smalheiser include Oregon Health & Science University & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Characterization of a novel set of membrane antigens associated with axonal growth. I. Biochemical and functional studies

TL;DR: Polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies raised against a partially purified preparation of cranin suggest that the antigens are important in neural development by mediating at least some of the responses of neural cells to laminin--for example, by acting as a laminIn receptor guiding axonal outgrowth and neuronal migration, or by involvement in the transport and binding of lamination to the surface of neurons and reactive glial cells that synthesize lamination.
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Characterization of a novel set of membrane antigens associated with axonal growth. II. Expression in the chick central nervous system.

TL;DR: It is suggested that MAb 4 and 3070 antigens are important in neural development by mediating at least some of the responses of neural cells to laminin--for example, by acting as a laminIn receptor guiding axonal outgrowth and neuronal migration, or by involvement in the transport and binding of laminationin to the surface of neurons and reactive glial cells.
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Altered cell shapes in fibroblasts treated with 5'-deoxy-5'-methylthioadenosine: relation to morphogenesis of neural cells.

TL;DR: Data from the present study indicate that MTA selectively reorganizes the mode of expression of a specific cytoplasmic machinery that is active in many types of cells, and which is involved in regulating cell shape and neurite formation in developing neurons.
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Identifying main finding sentences in clinical case reports.

TL;DR: A machine learning-based model that automatically predicts which sentence(s) from abstracts state the main finding in case reports, a step toward setting up a retrieval system in which, given one case report, one can find other case reports that report the same or very similar main findings.
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Evidence for binding of the ectodomain of amyloid precursor protein 695 and activated high molecular weight kininogen.

TL;DR: Results support the hypothesis that forms of APP and kininogen can interact in brain tissue and consider the implications of APP in neurite outgrowth, the APP-HKa interaction could modulate neurogenesis.