Institution
University of Würzburg
Education•Wurzburg, Bayern, Germany•
About: University of Würzburg is a education organization based out in Wurzburg, Bayern, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 31437 authors who have published 62203 publications receiving 2337033 citations. The organization is also known as: Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg & Würzburg University.
Topics: Population, Gene, Immune system, Receptor, CAS Registry Number
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The role of plasmonic resonances on the performance of nanoantennas and the influence of geometrical parameters imposed by nanofabrication are discussed.
Abstract: Nanoantennas for visible and infrared radiation can strongly enhance the interaction of light with nanoscale matter by their ability to efficiently link propagating and spatially localized optical fields. This ability unlocks an enormous potential for applications ranging from nanoscale optical microscopy and spectroscopy over solar energy conversion, integrated optical nanocircuitry, opto-electronics and density-of-states engineering to ultra-sensing as well as enhancement of optical nonlinearities. Here we review the current understanding of metallic optical antennas based on the background of both well-developed radiowave antenna engineering and plasmonics. In particular, we discuss the role of plasmonic resonances on the performance of nanoantennas and address the influence of geometrical parameters imposed by nanofabrication. Finally, we give a brief account of the current status of the field and the major established and emerging lines of investigation in this vivid area of research.
878 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that an immune response may occur in the nigrostriatal dopaminergic regions in Parkinson's disease and that TNF-alpha may be related, at least in part, to the neuronal degeneration.
876 citations
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University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center1, University of South Florida2, Harvard University3, Cleveland Clinic4, University of California, Los Angeles5, Texas Oncology6, Ohio State University7, Sarah Cannon Research Institute8, Stanford University9, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Bordeaux10, Fox Chase Cancer Center11, University of Würzburg12, University of Miami13, University of Rochester14
TL;DR: KTE-X19 induced durable remissions in a majority of patients with relapsed or refractory mantle-cell lymphoma, and led to serious and life-threatening toxic effects that were consistent with those reported with other CAR T-cell therapies.
Abstract: Background Patients with relapsed or refractory mantle-cell lymphoma who have disease progression during or after the receipt of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor therapy have a poo...
875 citations
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TL;DR: This article showed that the anchor effect depends on the applicability of activated information, and that the activated information was not representative for the absolute judgment and the targets of the two judgment tasks were sufficiently different.
Abstract: Results of 3 studies support the notion that anchoring is a special case of semantic priming; specifically, information that is activated to solve a comparative anchoring task will subsequently be more accessible when participants make absolute judgments. By using the logic of priming research, in Study 1 the authors showed that the strength of the anchor effect depends on the applicability of activated information. Study 2 revealed a contrast effect when the activated information was not representative for the absolute judgment and the targets of the 2 judgment tasks were sufficiently different. Study 3 demonstrated that generating absolute judgments requires more time when comparative judgments include an implausible anchor and can therefore be made without relevant target information that would otherwise be accessible.
873 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that mice homozygous for the IL-2 gene mutation are normal with regard to thymocyte and peripheral T-cell subset composition, but that a dysregulation of the immune system is manifested by reduced polyclonal in vitro T- cell responses and by dramatic changes in the isotype levels of serum immunoglobulins.
Abstract: Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a lymphocytotropic hormone which is thought to have a key role in the immune response of mammalian cells. It is produced by a subpopulation of activated T-lymphocytes and acts in vitro as the principal auto- and paracrine T-cell growth factor (for reviews see refs 1-3). IL-2 is, however, not the sole T-cell growth factor, nor does it act exclusively on T cells, also promoting growth of NK cells and differentiation of B cells. A role for IL-2 in T-cell development has been postulated but remains controversial. Here we test the requirement for IL-2 in vivo using IL-2-deficient mice generated by targeted recombination. We find that mice homozygous for the IL-2 gene mutation are normal with regard to thymocyte and peripheral T-cell subset composition, but that a dysregulation of the immune system is manifested by reduced polyclonal in vitro T-cell responses and by dramatic changes in the isotype levels of serum immunoglobulins.
869 citations
Authors
Showing all 31653 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Peer Bork | 206 | 697 | 245427 |
Cyrus Cooper | 204 | 1869 | 206782 |
D. M. Strom | 176 | 3167 | 194314 |
George P. Chrousos | 169 | 1612 | 120752 |
David A. Bennett | 167 | 1142 | 109844 |
Marc W. Kirschner | 162 | 457 | 102145 |
Josef M. Penninger | 154 | 700 | 107295 |
William A. Catterall | 154 | 536 | 83561 |
Rui Zhang | 151 | 2625 | 107917 |
Niels Birbaumer | 142 | 835 | 77853 |
Kim Nasmyth | 142 | 294 | 59231 |
James J. Gross | 139 | 529 | 100206 |
Michael Schmitt | 134 | 2007 | 114667 |
Jean-Luc Brédas | 134 | 1026 | 85803 |
Alexander Schmidt | 134 | 1185 | 83879 |