Institution
Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
Nonprofit•Madison, Wisconsin, United States•
About: Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation is a nonprofit organization based out in Madison, Wisconsin, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Induced pluripotent stem cell & Vitamin D and neurology. The organization has 4209 authors who have published 3523 publications receiving 61017 citations.
Topics: Induced pluripotent stem cell, Vitamin D and neurology, Stem cell, Signal, Layer (electronics)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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18 Mar 1994TL;DR: The polynucleotide sequences, comprising DNA and RNA molecules, can be directly administered, for example by injection, to tissues, such as muscle, and expressed as a protein, polypeptide or polyptide.
Abstract: Polynucleotide sequences, comprising DNA and RNA molecules can be directly administered, for example by injection, to tissues, such as muscle, and expressed as a protein, polypeptide or polypeptide. The polynucleotides can be contained within liposomes or the polynucleotides can free from association with transfection-facilitating proteins, viral particles, liposomal formulations, charged lipids and calcium phosphate precipitating agents.
1,370 citations
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07 Jun 1995TL;DR: In this paper, a method for delivering an isolated polynucleotide such as DNA or RNA to the interior of a cell in a mammal comprising the injection of an isolated POINTE into a muscle of the mammal where the poynucleotide is taken up by the cells of the muscle and exerts a therapeutic effect on the mammal.
Abstract: A method for delivering an isolated polynucleotide such as DNA or RNA, to the interior of a cell in a mammal comprising the injection of an isolated polynucleotide into a muscle of the mammal where the polynucleotide is taken up by the cells of the muscle and exerts a therapeutic effect on the mammal. The method can be used to deliver a therapeutic polypeptide to the cells of the mammal, to provide an immune response upon in vivo translation of the polynucleotide, to deliver antisense polynucleotides, to deliver receptors to the cells of the mammal or to provide transitory gene therapy.
1,231 citations
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TL;DR: A purified preparation of primate embryonic stem cells is disclosed in this paper, which is characterized by the following cell surface markers: SSEA-1 (−),SSEA-4 (+), TRA-1-60 (+); TRA- 1-81 (+); and alkaline phosphatase (+).
Abstract: A purified preparation of primate embryonic stem cells is disclosed. This preparation is characterized by the following cell surface markers: SSEA-1 (−); SSEA-4 (+); TRA-1-60 (+); TRA-1-81 (+); and alkaline phosphatase (+). In a particularly advantageous embodiment, the cells of the preparation are human embryonic stem cells, have normal karyotypes, and continue to proliferate in an undifferentiated state after continuous culture for eleven months. The embryonic stem cell lines also retain the ability, throughout the culture, to form trophoblast and to differentiate into all tissues derived from all three embryonic germ layers (endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm). A method for isolating a primate embryonic stem cell line is also disclosed.
1,059 citations
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17 Jun 1997TL;DR: In this article, a novel scene reconstruction technique is presented, which avoids image correspondence problems by working in a discretized scene space whose voxels are traversed in a fixed visibility ordering.
Abstract: A novel scene reconstruction technique is presented, different from previous approaches in its ability to cope with large changes in visibility and its modeling of intrinsic scene color and texture information. The method avoids image correspondence problems by working in a discretized scene space whose voxels are traversed in a fixed visibility ordering. This strategy takes full account of occlusions and allows the input cameras to be far apart and widely distributed about the environment. The algorithm identifies a special set of invariant voxels which together form a spatial and photometric reconstruction of the scene, fully consistent with the input images. The approach is evaluated with images from both inward- and outward-facing cameras.
531 citations
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21 Mar 1990TL;DR: In this paper, the interstitial introduction of an isolated polynucleotide into a tissue of the vertebrate is taken up by the cells of the tissue and exerts a therapeutic effect on the vertebrates.
Abstract: A method for delivering an isolated polynucleotide to the interior of a cell in a vertebrate, comprising the interstitial introduction of an isolated polynucleotide into a tissue of the vertebrate where the polynucleotide is taken up by the cells of the tissue and exerts a therapeutic effect on the vertebrate. The method can be used to deliver a therapeutic polypeptide to the cells of the vertebrate, to provide an immune response upon in vivo translation of the polynucleotide, to deliver antisense polynucleotides, to deliver receptors to the cells of the vertebrate, or to provide transitory gene therapy.
529 citations
Authors
Showing all 4209 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Terrie E. Moffitt | 182 | 594 | 150609 |
Darien Wood | 160 | 2174 | 136596 |
Barbara E.K. Klein | 160 | 856 | 93319 |
Michael F. Holick | 145 | 767 | 107937 |
Yoshihiro Kawaoka | 139 | 883 | 75087 |
Hector F. DeLuca | 133 | 1303 | 69395 |
Barry M. Trost | 124 | 1635 | 79501 |
James A. Dumesic | 118 | 615 | 58935 |
Giulio Tononi | 114 | 511 | 58519 |
John Ralph | 109 | 442 | 39238 |
Frank S. Bates | 107 | 589 | 53582 |
James A. Thomson | 104 | 387 | 93683 |
Thomas A. Lipo | 103 | 682 | 43110 |
Richard A. Anderson | 100 | 634 | 36216 |
Brian K. Shoichet | 98 | 281 | 40313 |