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Sergey Ivanov

Researcher at South Ural State University

Publications -  100
Citations -  4286

Sergey Ivanov is an academic researcher from South Ural State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 75 publications receiving 3820 citations. Previous affiliations of Sergey Ivanov include Business International Corporation & Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

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Expression of Hypoxia-Inducible Cell-Surface Transmembrane Carbonic Anhydrases in Human Cancer

TL;DR: The studies show an important causal link between hypoxia, extracellular acidification, and induction or enhanced expression of these enzymes in human tumors and conclude that the cell surface transmembrane carbonic anhydrases CA IX and CA XII are overexpressed in many tumors suggesting that this is a common feature of cancer cells that may be required for tumor progression.
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Down-regulation of transmembrane carbonic anhydrases in renal cell carcinoma cell lines by wild-type von Hippel-Lindau transgenes

TL;DR: To discover genes involved in von Hippel-Lindau (VHL)-mediated carcinogenesis, renal cell carcinoma cell lines stably transfected with wild-type VHL-expressing transgenes were used and large-scale RNA differential display technology applied to identify several differentially expressed genes.
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Breakup and early seafloor spreading between India and Antarctica

TL;DR: A tectonic interpretation of the breakup and early seafloor spreading between India and Antarctica based on improved coverage of potential field and seismic data off the east Antarctic margin between the Gunnerus Ridge and the Bruce Rise is presented in this article.
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The chromo and SET domains of the Clr4 protein are essential for silencing in fission yeast

TL;DR: Results show that clr4 plays a critical role in silencing at mating-type loci and centromeres through the organization of repressive chromatin structure and demonstrate a new, activator function for Clr4p.
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Novel Alleles of the Chemokine-Receptor Gene CCR5

TL;DR: The identification of 16 additional mutations in the coding region of the CCR5 gene, all but 3 of which are codon altering or "nonsynonymous," which is consistent with an adaptive accumulation of function-altering alleles for this gene.