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Sanja Dabelić

Researcher at University of Zagreb

Publications -  31
Citations -  1338

Sanja Dabelić is an academic researcher from University of Zagreb. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Population. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1193 citations.

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Galectin-3: an open-ended story.

TL;DR: Through specific interactions with a variety of intra- and extracellular proteins galectin-3 affects numerous biological processes and seems to be involved in different physiological and pathophysiological conditions, such as development, immune reactions, and neoplastic transformation and metastasis.
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Galectin-1 and galectin-3 expression profiles in classically and alternatively activated human macrophages.

TL;DR: Recognition of distinct Gal-3 expression profiles in differently activated macrophages provides a new insight on biological characteristics of these cells and sheds a new light of galectin-3 as a modulator of individual macrophage subset.
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Insights into complexity of Congenital disorders of glycosylation

TL;DR: The current knowledge on the clinical, biochemical and genetic characteristic of distinct CDGs, as well as existing diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are summarized, aiming to contribute to the awareness on the existence of these rare diseases and encourage the experts to elucidate its genetic background, improve diagnostics and develop new strategies for their treatment.
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Galectin-3 in macrophage-like cells exposed to immunomodulatory drugs.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (aspirin and indomethacin) and glucocorticoids (hydrocortisone and dexamethasone) on galectin-3, a multifunctional beta-galactoside binding lectin, was investigated.
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Stress causes tissue-specific changes in the sialyltransferase activity.

TL;DR: Results of serum corticosterone analysis indicate that showed increase in acute stress and decrease in chronic stress are in good accordance with the hypothesis that cortic testosterone has a role in the regulation of liver ST activity.