Institution
Eli Lilly and Company
Company•Indianapolis, Indiana, United States•
About: Eli Lilly and Company is a company organization based out in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Receptor. The organization has 17826 authors who have published 22835 publications receiving 946714 citations. The organization is also known as: Eli Lily.
Topics: Population, Receptor, Placebo, Insulin, Agonist
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: The in vitro pharmacology of a structurally novel compound, LY341495, was investigated at human recombinant metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptor subtypes expressed in non-neuronal cells and represents a novel pharmacological agent for elucidating the function of mGlu receptors in experimental systems.
377 citations
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TL;DR: Once-weekly dulaglutide is non-inferior to once-daily liraglUTide for least-squares mean reduction in HbA1c, with a similar safety and tolerability profile.
377 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that methylation-associated inactivation of TIMP-3 is frequent in many human tumors, and that discrete regions within the TIMp-3 CpG island may be important for the silencing of this gene.
Abstract: Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-3 (TIMP-3) antagonizes matrix metalloproteinase activity and can suppress tumor growth, angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis. Loss of TIMP-3 has been related to the acquisition of tumorigenesis. Herein, we show that TIMP-3 is silenced in association with aberrant promoter-region methylation in cell lines derived from human cancers. TIMP-3 expression was restored after 5-aza-2'deoxycytidine-mediated demethylation of the TIMP-3 proximal promoter region. Genomic bisulfite sequencing revealed that TIMP-3 silencing was related to the overall density of methylation and that discrete regions within the TIMP-3 CpG island may be important for the silencing of this gene. Aberrant methylation of TIMP-3 occurred in primary cancers of the kidney, brain, colon, breast, and lung, but not in any of 41 normal tissue samples. The most frequent TIMP-3 methylation was found in renal cancers, which originate in the tissue that normally expresses the highest TIMP-3 levels. This methylation correlated with a lack of detectable TIMP-3 protein in these tumors. Together, these data show that methylation-associated inactivation of TIMP-3 is frequent in many human tumors.
376 citations
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TL;DR: Progress is being made in the development of novel agonists and antagonists with receptor subtype selectivity, mice with genetic deletion of the cannabinoid receptors, and receptor-specific antibodies, which should help in providing a better understanding of the physiological role of the cannabinoids.
Abstract: ▪ Abstract Marijuana has been in use for over 4000 years as a therapeutic and as a recreational drug. Within the past decade, two cannabinoid receptor types have been identified, their signal transduction characterized, and an endogenous lipid agonist isolated from mammalian tissues. The CB1 cannabinoid receptor is widely distributed in mammalian tissues, with the highest concentrations found in brain neurons. CB1 receptors are coupled to modulation of adenylate cyclase and ion channels. The CB2 receptor is found in cells of the immune system and is coupled to inhibition of adenylate cyclase. Both receptor types selectively bind Δ9-THC, the active principle in marijuana, and anandamide (arachidonylethanolamide), an endogenous cannabimimetic eicosanoid. Progress is being made in the development of novel agonists and antagonists with receptor subtype selectivity, mice with genetic deletion of the cannabinoid receptors, and receptor-specific antibodies, which should help in providing a better understanding o...
376 citations
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TL;DR: The results provide a method to rapidly screen new analogs for potential toxicity and define a toxicity index for chain terminators to account for relative rates of incorporation versus removal.
376 citations
Authors
Showing all 17866 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Mark J. Daly | 204 | 763 | 304452 |
Irving L. Weissman | 201 | 1141 | 172504 |
Eric J. Topol | 193 | 1373 | 151025 |
Tony Hunter | 175 | 593 | 124726 |
Xiang Zhang | 154 | 1733 | 117576 |
Jerrold M. Olefsky | 143 | 595 | 77356 |
Stephen F. Badylak | 133 | 530 | 57083 |
George A. Bray | 131 | 896 | 100975 |
Lloyd Paul Aiello | 131 | 506 | 85550 |
Levi A. Garraway | 129 | 366 | 99989 |
Mark Sullivan | 126 | 802 | 63916 |
James A. Russell | 124 | 1024 | 87929 |
Tony L. Yaksh | 123 | 806 | 60898 |
Elisabetta Dejana | 122 | 430 | 48254 |
Hagop S. Akiskal | 118 | 565 | 50869 |