Institution
Keele University
Education•Newcastle-under-Lyme, United Kingdom•
About: Keele University is a education organization based out in Newcastle-under-Lyme, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Stars. The organization has 11318 authors who have published 26323 publications receiving 894671 citations. The organization is also known as: Keele University.
Topics: Population, Stars, Health care, Galaxy, Planet
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Recent studies in patients with asthma and cutaneous basal cell carcinoma that demonstrate associations between GSTP1 and GSTT1 genotypes and disease phenotypes indicate the importance of GST polymorphism in determining disease phenotype.
Abstract: The loci encoding the glutathione-S-transferase (GST) enzymes comprise a large supergene family located on at least seven chromosomes. The function of the GST enzymes has traditionally been considered to be the detoxication of electrophiles by glutathione conjugation. A wide variety of endogenous (e.g. by-products of reactive oxygen species activity) and exogenous (e.g. polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) electrophilic substrates have been identified. Interestingly, recent data has suggested a role, at least for the pi class gene product, in jun kinase inhibition. Since many GST genes are polymorphic, there has been considerable interest in determining whether particular allelic variants are associated with altered risk (or outcome) of a variety of diseases. We describe recent studies in patients with asthma and cutaneous basal cell carcinoma that demonstrate associations between GSTP1 and GSTT1 genotypes and disease phenotypes. Thus, GSTP1val105/val105 was protective against asthma symptoms and GSTT1 null was associated with a subgroup of basal cell carcinoma patients who develop large numbers of primary tumours in clusters. Importantly, these associations were characterised by relatively large odds ratios (0.11 and 7.4, respectively) implying that the allelic variants exert a substantial biological effect. These and other data indicate the importance of GST polymorphism in determining disease phenotype.
755 citations
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TL;DR: This framework is offered in light of recent interest in finding greater continuity throughout the lifespan and creating a more comprehensive explanation of cognitive function and cognitive change.
750 citations
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TL;DR: This Review describes how transfer of oxygen atoms, bond activation, and coupling of fragments can be mediated by atomic or cluster metal ions, and improves the understanding of the intrinsic operation of a practical catalyst at a strictly molecular level.
Abstract: Gas-phase experiments with state-of-the-art techniques of mass spectrometry provide detailed insights into numerous elementary processes. The focus of this Review is on elementary reactions of ions that achieve complete catalytic cycles under thermal conditions. The examples chosen cover aspects of catalysis pertinent to areas as diverse as atmospheric chemistry and surface chemistry. We describe how transfer of oxygen atoms, bond activation, and coupling of fragments can be mediated by atomic or cluster metal ions. In some cases truly unexpected analogies of the idealized gas-phase ion catalysis can be drawn with related chemical transformations in solution or the solid state, and so improve our understanding of the intrinsic operation of a practical catalyst at a strictly molecular level.
747 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, five minor and trace elements have been variously combined to produce a set of binary diagrams in addition to total alkali-SiO2 diagrams, that discriminate between fresh tholeiitic and alkali basalts.
744 citations
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TL;DR: PEPPSI (pyridine-enhanced precatalyst preparation, stabilization, and initiation) palladium precatalysts with bulky NHC ligands have established themselves as successful alternatives to palladium phosphine complexes.
Abstract: Palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions enable organic chemists to form C-C bonds in targeted positions and under mild conditions. Although phosphine ligands have been intensively researched, in the search for even better cross-coupling catalysts attention has recently turned to the use of N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands, which form a strong bond to the palladium center. PEPPSI (pyridine-enhanced precatalyst preparation, stabilization, and initiation) palladium precatalysts with bulky NHC ligands have established themselves as successful alternatives to palladium phosphine complexes. This Review shows the success of these species in Suzuki-Miyaura, Negishi, and Stille-Migita cross-couplings as well as in amination and sulfination reactions.
740 citations
Authors
Showing all 11402 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
George Davey Smith | 224 | 2540 | 248373 |
Simon D. M. White | 189 | 795 | 231645 |
James F. Wilson | 146 | 677 | 101883 |
Stephen O'Rahilly | 138 | 520 | 75686 |
Wendy Taylor | 131 | 1252 | 89457 |
Nicola Maffulli | 115 | 1570 | 59548 |
Georg Kresse | 111 | 430 | 244729 |
Patrick B. Hall | 111 | 470 | 68383 |
Peter T. Katzmarzyk | 110 | 618 | 56484 |
John F. Dovidio | 109 | 466 | 46982 |
Elizabeth H. Blackburn | 108 | 344 | 50726 |
Mary L. Phillips | 105 | 422 | 39995 |
Garry P. Nolan | 104 | 474 | 46025 |
Wayne W. Hancock | 103 | 505 | 35694 |
Mohamed H. Sayegh | 103 | 485 | 38540 |