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Sabarish Ramachandran

Researcher at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

Publications -  46
Citations -  1780

Sabarish Ramachandran is an academic researcher from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Mammary tumor. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 41 publications receiving 1364 citations. Previous affiliations of Sabarish Ramachandran include Georgia Regents University & Keimyung University.

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Identification of a novel Na + -coupled Fe 3+ -citrate transport system, distinct from mammalian INDY, for uptake of citrate in mammalian cells.

TL;DR: A hitherto unknown transport system for citrate in mammalian cells that was detectable in primary hepatocytes and neuronal cell lines and has implications to iron-overload conditions where circulating free iron increases, which would stimulate cellular uptake of citrate and consequently affect multiple metabolic pathways.
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Unconventional Functions of Amino Acid Transporters: Role in Macropinocytosis (SLC38A5/SLC38A3) and Diet-Induced Obesity/Metabolic Syndrome (SLC6A19/SLC6A14/SLC6A6)

TL;DR: The present review highlights the unusual involvement of selective amino acid transporters in macropinocytosis and diet-induced obesity/metabolic syndrome.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Abstract 18: Slc5a8 inactivation is associated with mammary gland involution delay, early onset of mammary tumorigenesis and accelerated lung metastasis

TL;DR: It is shown that milk stasis-associated mechanical stretching, which occurs in early onset of mammary gland involution, dramatically induced Slc5a8 expression in luminal epithelium and that induction of Slc 5a8 with DNA methyltransferase inhibitors coupled with butyrate administration might represent a novel approach to breast cancer treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expression and Function of StAR in Cancerous and Non-Cancerous Human and Mouse Breast Tissues: New Insights into Diagnosis and Treatment of Hormone-Sensitive Breast Cancer

TL;DR: In this article , the authors demonstrate that StAR mRNA expression was aberrantly high in human hormone-dependent BC (MCF7, MDA-MB-361, and T-47D), modest in hormone-independent triple negative BC (TNBC), and had little to none in non-cancerous mammary epithelial (HMEC, MCF10A, and MCF12F) cells.