W
Wolfgang Weninger
Researcher at Medical University of Vienna
Publications - 362
Citations - 25279
Wolfgang Weninger is an academic researcher from Medical University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cytotoxic T cell & Immune system. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 325 publications receiving 21882 citations. Previous affiliations of Wolfgang Weninger include University of Pennsylvania & Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase expression in human secretory endometrium
Walter Tschugguel,Christian Schneeberger,Gertrud Unfried,Klaus Czerwenka,Wolfgang Weninger,Michael Mildner,J R Bishop,Johannes C. Huber +7 more
TL;DR: The presence and function of the inducible isoform of NOS (iNOS) in normal human endometrium has not been fully elucidated until recently as discussed by the authors.
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Comparative study of regenerative effects of mesenchymal stem cells derived from placental amnion, chorion and umbilical cord on dermal wounds.
Juliane Ertl,Melanie Pichlsberger,Alexandru Tuca,Paul Wurzer,Jakob Fuchs,Stefan H. Geyer,Barbara Maurer-Gesek,Wolfgang Weninger,Dagmar Pfeiffer,Vladimir Bubalo,Daryousch Parvizi,Lars P. Kamolz,Ingrid Lang +12 more
TL;DR: All three PMSC types exert similar beneficial effects on wound closure and neovascularization in the authors' mouse model, which warrants further investigation in clinical trials.
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Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction Products of Alternatively Spliced mRNAs Form DNA Heteroduplexes and Heteroduplex Complexes
TL;DR: Findings suggest that this RT-PCR product is formed by base pairing of complementary heteroduplex loops and represents a novel four-stranded DNA structure.
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Visualizing vertebrate embryos with episcopic 3D imaging techniques.
TL;DR: This work aims to provide a brief overview about modern volume data–generation techniques, focusing on episcopic 3D imaging methods, and the strengths and weaknesses in its ability to visualize embryo anatomy and labeled gene product patterns, specifically.
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T cell migration in intact lymph nodes in vivo.
TL;DR: Recent developments in uncovering the migration modes employed by T cells in the lymph node, the underlying molecular mechanisms, and the scanning strategies utilised by T Cells to ensure a timely response to antigenic stimuli are reviewed.