Institution
Hokkaido University
Education•Sapporo, Hokkaidô, Japan•
About: Hokkaido University is a education organization based out in Sapporo, Hokkaidô, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Population. The organization has 53925 authors who have published 115403 publications receiving 2651647 citations. The organization is also known as: Hokudai & Hokkaidō daigaku.
Topics: Catalysis, Population, Gene, Virus, Oxide
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Infection with strains of Helicobacter pylori that carry the cytotoxin-associated antigen A (cagA) gene is associated with gastric carcinoma, and CagA is noted for its variation, particularly at the SHP2-binding site, which could affect the potential of different strains of H. pyloris to promote gastric cancers.
Abstract: Infection with strains of Helicobacter pylori that carry the cytotoxin-associated antigen A (cagA) gene is associated with gastric carcinoma. Recent studies have shed light on the mechanism through which the cagA gene product, CagA, elicits pathophysiological actions. CagA is delivered into gastric epithelial cells by the bacterial type IV secretion system, where it deregulates the SHP2 oncoprotein. Intriguingly, CagA is noted for its variation, particularly at the SHP2-binding site, which could affect the potential of different strains of H. pylori to promote gastric carcinogenesis.
687 citations
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Metropolitan State University of Denver1, University of Catania2, University of California, Berkeley3, Qingdao Agricultural University4, University of Lyon5, United States Department of Agriculture6, University of Minnesota7, Michigan State University8, Hungarian Academy of Sciences9, Hokkaido University10, University of Barcelona11, ENEA12, Corvinus University of Budapest13, Oregon State University14, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis15
TL;DR: It is concluded that particularly fruitful areas of research should include fundamental studies of its overwintering, host-use, and dispersal capabilities; as well as applied studies of alternative, cost-effective management techniques to complement insecticide use within the integrated pest management framework.
Abstract: The Asian vinegar fly Drosophila suzukii (spotted wing Drosophila (SWD)) has emerged as a major invasive insect pest of small and stone fruits in both the Americas and Europe since the late 2000s. While research efforts have rapidly progressed in Asia, North America, and Europe over the past 5 years, important new insights may be gained in comparing and contrasting findings across the regions affected by SWD. In this review, we explore common themes in the invasion biology of SWD by examining (1) its biology and current pest status in endemic and recently invaded regions; (2) current efforts and future research needs for the development of predictive models for its geographic expansion; and (3) prospects for both natural and classical (=importation) biological control of SWD in invaded habitats, with emphasis on the role of hymenopteran parasitoids. We conclude that particularly fruitful areas of research should include fundamental studies of its overwintering, host-use, and dispersal capa- bilities; as well as applied studies of alternative, cost-ef- fective management techniques to complement insecticide use within the integrated pest management framework. Finally, we emphasize that outreach efforts are critical to effective SWD management by highlighting successful
686 citations
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TL;DR: The results indicate that NG2+ cells in the normal CNS are oligodendrocyte precursors with restricted lineage potential and that cell loss and gliosis are not sufficient to alter the lineage potential of these progenitors.
685 citations
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TL;DR: The metabarcoding approach presented here is non-invasive, more efficient, more cost-effective and more sensitive than the traditional survey methods and has the potential to serve as an alternative tool for biodiversity monitoring that revolutionizes natural resource management and ecological studies of fish communities on larger spatial and temporal scales.
Abstract: We developed a set of universal PCR primers (MiFish-U/E) for metabarcoding environmental DNA (eDNA) from fishes. Primers were designed using aligned whole mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) sequence...
685 citations
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University of Marburg1, Temple University2, NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital3, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio4, National Institutes of Health5, McGill University Health Centre6, Brigham and Women's Hospital7, Guangzhou Medical University8, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven9, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia10, Flinders University11, Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital12, University of the Republic13, Hokkaido University14, University of Paris15, University of Barcelona16, University of British Columbia17, University of Manchester18
TL;DR: The assessment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease has been refined to separate the spirometric assessment from symptom evaluation, and the concept of de‐escalation of therapy is introduced in the treatment assessment scheme.
Abstract: This Executive Summary of the Global Strategy for the Diagnosis, Management and Prevention of COPD, Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) 2017 Report focuses primarily on the revised and novel parts of the document. The most significant changes include: (i) the assessment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease has been refined to separate the spirometric assessment from symptom evaluation. ABCD groups are now proposed to be derived exclusively from patient symptoms and their history of exacerbations; (ii) for each of the groups A to D, escalation strategies for pharmacological treatments are proposed; (iii) the concept of de-escalation of therapy is introduced in the treatment assessment scheme; (iv)non-pharmacological therapies are comprehensively presented and (v) the importance of co-morbid conditions in managing COPD is reviewed.
683 citations
Authors
Showing all 54156 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Shizuo Akira | 261 | 1308 | 320561 |
Yi Cui | 220 | 1015 | 199725 |
John F. Hartwig | 145 | 714 | 66472 |
Yoshihiro Kawaoka | 139 | 883 | 75087 |
David Y. Graham | 138 | 1047 | 80886 |
Takashi Kadowaki | 137 | 873 | 89729 |
Kazunari Domen | 130 | 908 | 77964 |
Susumu Kitagawa | 125 | 809 | 69594 |
Toshikazu Nakamura | 121 | 732 | 51374 |
Toshio Hirano | 120 | 401 | 55721 |
Li-Jun Wan | 113 | 639 | 52128 |
Wenbin Lin | 113 | 474 | 56786 |
Xiaoming Li | 113 | 1932 | 72445 |
Jinhua Ye | 112 | 658 | 49496 |
Terence Tao | 111 | 606 | 94316 |