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Nikki Bollinger

Researcher at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Publications -  11
Citations -  522

Nikki Bollinger is an academic researcher from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: MAPK/ERK pathway & Transactivation. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 11 publications receiving 492 citations.

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Rapid and sustained nuclear–cytoplasmic ERK oscillations induced by epidermal growth factor

TL;DR: The characterization of single‐cell ERK dynamics provides a quantitative foundation for understanding the regulatory structure of this signaling cascade and revealed that negative feedback from phosphorylated ERK to the cascade input was necessary to match the robustness of the oscillation characteristics observed over a broad range of ligand concentrations.
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Multiple Mechanisms Are Responsible for Transactivation of the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor in Mammary Epithelial Cells

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that within a single cell type, the EG FR autocrine system can couple multiple signaling pathways to ERK activation and that this modulation of EGFR autocrine signaling can be accomplished at multiple regulatory steps.
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ProMAT: protein microarray analysis tool

TL;DR: ProMAT generates a set of comprehensive figures for assessing results and diagnosing process quality from enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay microarray experiments, and is distributed as open-source Java and R code.
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Lysophosphatidic acid-induced ERK activation and chemotaxis in MC3T3-E1 preosteoblasts are independent of EGF receptor transactivation

TL;DR: The results identify ERK1/2 activation as a mediator of LPA‐stimulated MC3T3‐E1 cell migration that may be relevant to preosteoblast motility and gene expression during bone repair in vivo.
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Studying cellular processes and detecting disease with protein microarrays.

TL;DR: A conceptual overview of the different approaches for protein microarray is provided, and some of the most significant applications of these microarrays to date are examined, with an emphasis on how global protein analyses can be used to facilitate biomedical research.