Institution
Tufts University
Education•Medford, Massachusetts, United States•
About: Tufts University is a education organization based out in Medford, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 32800 authors who have published 66881 publications receiving 3451152 citations. The organization is also known as: Tufts College & Universitatis Tuftensis.
Topics: Population, Medicine, Health care, Cancer, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Two functional screens for proteins required for the invasion of fibrosarcoma cells that identified the molecular chaperone heat shock protein 90 are described, indicating that cell-impermeant anti-hsp90 drugs might decrease invasiveness without the concerns inherent in inhibiting intracellular hsp90.
Abstract: Tumour cell invasiveness is crucial for cancer metastasis and is not yet understood. Here we describe two functional screens for proteins required for the invasion of fibrosarcoma cells that identified the molecular chaperone heat shock protein 90 (hsp90). The hsp90 alpha isoform, but not hsp90 beta, is expressed extracellularly where it interacts with the matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2). Inhibition of extracellular hsp90 alpha decreases both MMP2 activity and invasiveness. This role for extracellular hsp90 alpha in MMP2 activation indicates that cell-impermeant anti-hsp90 drugs might decrease invasiveness without the concerns inherent in inhibiting intracellular hsp90.
560 citations
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TL;DR: Results indicate that certain indirect angiogenic cytokines, such as PDGF-BB or TGF-β1, may act via induction of bFGF and VEGF gene expression in cells resident near endothelial cells in vivo.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDHypoxia and indirect angiogenic factors may stimulate angiogenesis via induction of endothelial cell mitogen(s). To evaluate this hypothesis, we investigated whether low oxygen tension or cytokines known to promote neovascularization in vivo could modulate the expression of either vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) or basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) in human vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs).METHODS AND RESULTSSMCs were treated with platelet-derived growth factor BB (PDGF-BB) or transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) or exposed to low oxygen tension in serum-free medium. Northern analysis detected low basal levels of VEGF and bFGF mRNA in extracts of unstimulated SMCs. However, both VEGF and bFGF transcripts increased after administration of PDGF-BB (10 or 20 ng/mL) or TGF-beta 1 (0.1 to 10 ng/mL). Hypoxia was a potent stimulus for VEGF gene expression but had no apparent effect on bFGF steady-state mRNA levels.CONCLUSIONSThese results indicate that certain indirect angiog...
559 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that the contribution of GSHPx-1 to the cellular antioxidant mechanism under normal animal development and physiological conditions and to the pulmonary defense against hyperoxic insult is very limited.
559 citations
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American Academy of Neurology1, Rush University Medical Center2, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston3, Wake Forest University4, Harvard University5, Brown University6, University of Pittsburgh7, University of Washington8, Boston University9, Tufts University10, University of California, San Francisco11
TL;DR: TCD is of established value in the screening of children aged 2 to 16 years with sickle cell disease for stroke risk and the detection and monitoring of angiographic vasospasm after spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, and contrast-enhanced TCD/TCCS can also provide useful information in right-to-left cardiac/extracardiac shunts and hemorrhagic cerebrovascular disease.
Abstract: Objective: To review the use of transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) and transcranial color-coded sonography (TCCS) for diagnosis. Methods: The authors searched the literature for evidence of 1) if TCD provides useful information in specific clinical settings; 2) if using this information improves clinical decision making, as reflected by improved patient outcomes; and 3) if TCD is preferable to other diagnostic tests in these clinical situations. Results: TCD is of established value in the screening of children aged 2 to 16 years with sickle cell disease for stroke risk (Type A, Class I) and the detection and monitoring of angiographic vasospasm after spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (Type A, Class I to II). TCD and TCCS provide important information and may have value for detection of intracranial steno-occlusive disease (Type B, Class II to III), vasomotor reactivity testing (Type B, Class II to III), detection of cerebral circulatory arrest/brain death (Type A, Class II), monitoring carotid endarterectomy (Type B, Class II to III), monitoring cerebral thrombolysis (Type B, Class II to III), and monitoring coronary artery bypass graft operations (Type B to C, Class II to III). Contrast-enhanced TCD/TCCS can also provide useful information in right-to-left cardiac/extracardiac shunts (Type A, Class II), intracranial occlusive disease (Type B, Class II to IV), and hemorrhagic cerebrovascular disease (Type B, Class II to IV), although other techniques may be preferable in these settings.
558 citations
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TL;DR: The novelty of the hypothesis is the assertion that impairment of one homocysteine metabolic pathway must lead to the impairment of the otherhomocysteines metabolic pathway to cause homocysteinemia, which extends the simplistic view that a block of only one of the pathways is sufficient to cause Homocysteemia.
558 citations
Authors
Showing all 33110 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Walter C. Willett | 334 | 2399 | 413322 |
Frank B. Hu | 250 | 1675 | 253464 |
Ralph B. D'Agostino | 226 | 1287 | 229636 |
John Q. Trojanowski | 226 | 1467 | 213948 |
Peter Libby | 211 | 932 | 182724 |
David Baltimore | 203 | 876 | 162955 |
Eric B. Rimm | 196 | 988 | 147119 |
Lewis C. Cantley | 196 | 748 | 169037 |
Bernard Rosner | 190 | 1162 | 147661 |
Charles A. Dinarello | 190 | 1058 | 139668 |
William B. Kannel | 188 | 533 | 175659 |
Scott M. Grundy | 187 | 841 | 231821 |
John P. A. Ioannidis | 185 | 1311 | 193612 |
David H. Weinberg | 183 | 700 | 171424 |
Joel Schwartz | 183 | 1149 | 109985 |