592 results on '"Gottesman M"'
Search Results
2. Expression of a Multidrug-Resistance Gene in Human Tumors and Tissues
- Author
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Fojo, A. T., Ueda, K., Slamon, D. J., Poplack, D. G., Gottesman, M. M., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1987
3. Multiply Drug-Resistant Human KB Carcinoma Cells Have Decreased Amounts of a 75-KDa and a 72-KDa Glycoprotein
- Author
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Richert, N., Akiyama, S., Gottesman, M. M., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1985
4. Amplification of DNA Sequences in Human Multidrug-Resistant KB Carcinoma Cells
- Author
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Fojo, A. T., Whang-Peng, J., Gottesman, M. M., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1985
5. Isolation of the Gal Repressor
- Author
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Parks, J. S., Gottesman, M., Shimada, K., Weisberg, R. A., Perlman, R. L., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1971
6. In vitro Repression of the Transcription of gal Operon by Purified gal Repressor
- Author
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Nakanishi, Shigetada, Adhya, Sankar, Gottesman, M. E., and Pastan, Ira
- Published
- 1973
7. SV40 Pseudovirion gene delivery of a toxin to treat human adenocarcinomas in mice
- Author
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Kimchi-Sarfaty, C, Vieira, W D, Dodds, D, Sherman, A, Kreitman, R J, Shinar, S, and Gottesman, M M
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Drug selection of MDR1-transduced hematopoietic cells ex vivo increases transgene expression and chemoresistance in reconstituted bone marrow in mice
- Author
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Licht, T, Goldenberg, S K, Vieira, W D, Gottesman, M M, and Pastan, I
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Incorporating ePBL in Teaching Clinical Skills in Health Professions Education: W-20
- Author
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Khan, M, Gottesman, M, Kanofsky, S, and Cudmore, J
- Published
- 2012
10. ALCOHOL EFFECTS ON RETINOID HOMEOSTASIS IN THE ADULT MOUSE: 009
- Author
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Blaner, W. S., Clugston, R. D., Yuen, J., Lee, M. X., Jiang, H., Shmarakov, I., Goldberg, I. J., Berk, P., Gottesman, M. E., and Lewis, M. J.
- Published
- 2011
11. Imaging the Function of P-Glycoprotein With Radiotracers: Pharmacokinetics and In Vivo Applications
- Author
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Kannan, P, John, C, Zoghbi, S S, Halldin, C, Gottesman, M M, Innis, R B, and Hall, M D
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The multidrug-resistance gene in gene therapy of cancer and hematopoietic disorders
- Author
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Licht, T., Pastan, I., Gottesman, M. M., and Herrmann, F.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Cyclosporin A-Dependent Downregulation of the Na+/Ca2+ Exchanger Expression
- Author
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RAHAMIMOFF, H., ELBAZ, B., ALPEROVICH, A., KIMCHI-SARFATY, C., GOTTESMAN, M. M., LICHTENSTEIN, Y., ESKIN-SHWARTZ, M., and KASIR, J.
- Published
- 2007
14. Acquisition of multiple copies of a mutant topoisomerase IIα allele by chromosome 17 aneuploidy is associated with etoposide resistance in human melanoma cell lines
- Author
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Campain, J. A., Slovak, M. L., Schoenlein, P. V., Popescu, N. C., Gottesman, M. M., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance in normal and neoplastic hematopoietic cells
- Author
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Licht, T., Pastan, I., Gottesman, M., and Herrmann, F.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Human Multidrug-Resistant Cell Lines: Increased mdr1 Expression Can Precede Gene Amplification
- Author
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Fojo, A., Chin, J. E., Roninson, I. B., Richert, N., Pastan, I., and Gottesman, M. M.
- Published
- 1986
17. Expression of the Multidrug-Resistant Gene in Hepatocarcinogenesis and Regenerating Rat Liver
- Author
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Thorgeirsson, S. S., Huber, B. E., Sorrell, S., Fojo, A., Pastan, I., and Gottesman, M. M.
- Published
- 1987
18. Abstract
- Author
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Mache, Ch., Urban, Ch., Sauer, H., Brandesky, G., Meßner, H., Grienberger, H., Becker, H., Slave, I., Hauer, Ch., Pakisch, B., Oberbauer, R., Mokry, M., Ebner, F., Kleinert, R., Schiller, D., Kasparu, H., Schneider, G., Sega, W., Lutz, D., Mader, R. M., Steger, G. G., Sieder, A. E., Ovissi, L., Roth, E., Hamilton, G., Jakesz, R., Rainer, H., Schenk, T., Kornek, G., Schulz, F., Depisch, D., Rosen, H., Sebesta, Ch., Scheithauer, W., Locker, G. J., Czernin, J., Derfler, K., Gnant, M., Schiessel, R., Petru, E., Pickel, H., Heydarfadai, M., Lahousen, M., Haas, J., Sagaster, P., Flamm, J., Umek, H., Essl, R., Teich, G., Micksche, M., Ludwig, H., Ambros, P. F., Lestou, V., Strehl, S., Mann, G., Gadner, H., Eibl, B., Greiter, E., Grünewald, K., Gastl, G., Thaler, J., Aulitzky, W., Lion, T., Henn, T., Gaiger, A., Hofmann, J., Wolf, A., Spitaler, M., Ludescher, Christof, Grunicke, H., Mitterbauer, G., Stangl, E., Geissler, K., Jäger, U., Lechner, K., Mannhalter, C., Haas, Oskar A., Tirita, Anthi, Kahls, P., Haas, O., Hinterberger, W., Linkesch, W., Pober, Michael, Fae, Ingrid, Kyrle, Alexander, Neumeister, Andrea, Panzer, Simon, Kandioler, D., End, A., Grill, R., Karlic, H., Inhauser, T., Chott, A., Pirc-Danoewinata, H., Klepetko, W., Heinz, R., Hopfinger-Limberger, G., Koller, E., Schneider, B., Pittermann, E., Lorber, C., Eichinger, S., Neumann, E., Weidinger, J., Gisslinger, H., Bedford P., Jones D., Cawley J., Catovsky D., Bevan P., Scherrer, R., Bettelheim, P., Knöbl, P., Kyrie, P. A., Lazcika, K., Schwarzinger, I., Sillaber, C., Watzke, H., Dávid, M., Losonczy, H., Matolcsy, A., Papp, M., Prischl, F. C., Schwarzmeier, J. D., Zoubek, Andreas, Harbott, Jochen, Ritterbach, Jutta, Ritter, Jörg, Sillaber, Ch., Agis, H., Spanblöchl, E., Sperr, W. R., Valent, P., Czerwenka, K., Virgolini, I., Li, S. R., Müller, M., Wrann, M., Gaggl, S., Fasching, B., Herold, M., Geissler, D., Nachbaur, D., Huber, Ch., Schwaighofer, H., Pichl, M., Niederwieser, D., Gilly, B., Weissel, H., Lorber, Ch., Schwarzmeier, J., Gasché, C., Reinisch, W., Hilgarth, M., Keil, F., Thomssen, C., Kolb, H. J., Holler, E., Wilmanns, W., Tilg, H., Gächter, A., Panzer-Grümayer, E. R., Majdic, O., Kersey, J. H., Petzer, A. L., Bilgeri, R., Zilian, U., Geisen, F. H., Haun, M., Konwalinka, G., Fuchs, D., Zangerle, R., Artner-Dworzak, E., Weiss, G., Fritsch, P., Tilz, G. P., Dierich, M. P., Wachter, H., Schüller, J., Czejka, M. J., Jäger, W., Meyer, B., Weiss, C., Schernthaner, G., Marosi, Ch., Onderka, E., Schlögl, B., Maca, T., Hanak, R., Mannhalter, Ch., Brenner, B., Mayer, R., Langmann, A., Langmann, G., Slave, J., Poier, E., Stücklschweiger, G., Hackl, A., Fritz, A., Pabinger, I., Willfort, A., Groiss, E., Bernhart, M., Waldner, R., Krieger, O., Nowotny, H., Strobl, H., Michlmayr, G., Mistrik, M., lstvan, L., Kapiotis, S., Laczika, K., Speiser, W., Granena, A., Hermans, J., Zwaan, F., Gratwohl, A., Labar B., Mrsić M., Nemet D., Bogdanić V., Radman I., Zupančić-Šalek Silva, Kovačević-Metelko Jasna, Aurer I., Forstinger, C., Scholten, C., Kier, P., Kalhs, P., Schwinger, W., Slavc, I., Lackner, H., Nussbaumer, W., Fritsch, E., Fink, M., Zechner, O., Kührer, I., Kletter, V., Frey, S., Leitgeb, C., Fritz, E., Silly, H., Brezinschek, R., Kuss, I., Stöger, H., Schmid, M., Samonigg, H., Wilders-Truschnig, M., Schmidt, F., Bauernhofer, T., Kasparek, A. K., Ploner, F., Stoeger, H., Moser, R., Leikauf, W., Klemm, F., Pfeffel, F., Niessner, H., Poschauko, H., Pojer, E., Locker, G. J., Braun, J., Gnant, M. F. X., Michl, I., Pirker, R., Liebhard, A., Zielinski, C., Dittrich, C., Bernát, S. I., Pongrácz, E., Kastner, J., Raderer, M., Jorbenyi, Z., Yilmaz, A., Suardet, L., Lahm, H., Odartchenko, N., Varga, Gy., Sréter, L. A., Oberberg, D., Berdel, W. E., Budiman, R., Brand, C., Berkessy, S., Radványi, G., Pauker, Zs., Nagy, Zs., Karádi, Å., Serti, S., Hainz, R., Kirchweger, P., Prager, C., Prada, J., Neifer, S., Bienzle, U., Kremsner, P., Kämmerer, B., Vetterlein, M., Pohl, W., Letnansky, K., Imre, S. G., Parkas, T., Lakos, Zs., Kiss, A., Telek, B., Felszeghy, E., Kelemen, E., Rak, K., Pfeilstöcker, M., Reisner, R., Salamon, J., Georgopoulos, A., Feistauer, S., Georgopoulos, M., Graninger, W., Klinda, F., Hrubisko, M., Sakalova, A., Weißmann, A., Röhle, R., Fortelny, R., Gutierrez, F., Fritsch, G., Printz, D., Buchinger, P., Buchinger, P., Hoecker, P., Peters, C., Gebauer, E., Katanić, D., Nagy, Á., Szomor, Á., Med. J., Batinić D., Užaervić B., Marušić M., Kovačoević-Metelko Jasminka, Jakić-Razumović Jasminka, Kovačević-Metelko Jasminka, Zuoancić-Šalek Silva, Ihra, G. C., Reinisch, W. W., Hilgarth, M. F., Schwarzmeier, I. D., Várady, E., Molnár, Z. S., Fleischmann, T., Borbényi, Z., Bérczi, M., István, L., Szerafin, L., Jakó, J., Bányai, A., Dankó, K., Szegedi, Gy., Neubauer, M., Frudinger, A., Scholten, Ch., Forstinger, Ch., Dobrić I., Willheim, M., Szépfalusi, Z., Mader, R., Boltz, G., Schwarzmeier, J. D., Nahajevszky, S., Téri, N., Póth, I., Nagy, P., Smanykó, D., Babicz, T., Ujj, Gy., Iványi, J. L., Tóth, F. D., Kiss, J., Konja, J., Petković, I., Kardum, I., Kaštelan, M., Kelečić, J., Feminić, R., Djermanović, M., Bilić, E., Jakovljević, G., Peter, B., Gredelj, G., Senji, P., Thalhammer, F., Floth, A., Etele-Hainz, A., Kainberger, F., Radaszkiewicz, T., Kierner, H., Mód, Anna, Pitlik, E., Gottesman, M., Magócsi, Mária, Sarkadi, B., Knapp, S., Purtscher, B., DelleKarth, G., Jaeger, U., Krieger, O., Berger, W., Elbling, L., Ludescher, C., Hilbe, W., Eisterer, W., Preuß, E., Izraeli, S., Janssen, J. W. G., Walther, J. U., Kovar, H., Ludwig, W. D., Rechavi, G., Bartram, C. R., Rehberger, A., Mittermayer, F., Schauer, E., Kokoschka, E. M., Kammerer, B., Kokron, E., Desser, L., Abdul-Hamid, G., Kroschinksky, F., Luther, Th., Fischer, H., Nowak, R., Wolf, H., Fleischer, J., Wichmann, G., Albercht, S., Adorf, D., Kaboth, W., Nerl, C., Aman, J., Rudolf, G., Peschel, C., Anders, O., Burstein, Ch., Ernst, B., Steiner, H., Konrad, H., Annaloro, U. P., Mozzana, C., Butti, R., Della, C., Volpe A., Soligo D., Uderzo M., Lambertenghi-Deliliers G., Ansari, H., Dickson, D., Hasford, J., Hehlmann, R., Anyanwu, E., Krysa, S., Bülzebrück, H., Vogt-Moykopf, I., Arning, M., Südhoff, Th., Kliche, K. O., Wehmeier, A., Schneider, W., Arnold, R., Bunjes, D., Hertenstein, B., Hueske, D., Stefanic, M., Theobald, M., Wiesneth, M., Heimpel, H., Waldmann, H., Arseniev, L., Bokemeyer, C., Andres, J., Könneke, A., Papageorgiou, E., Kleine, H. -D., Battmer, K., Südmeyer, I., Zaki, M., Schmoll, H. -J., Stangel, W., Poliwoda, H., Link, H., Aul, C., Runde, V., Heyll, A., Germing, U., Gattermann, N., Ebert, A., Feinendegen, L. E., Huhn, D., Bergmann, L., Dönner, H., Hartlapp, J. H., Kreiter, H., Schuhmacher, K., Schalk T., Sparwasser C., Peschel U., Fraaß C. Huber, HIadik, F., Kolbe, K., Irschick, E., Bajko, G., Wozny, T., Hansz, J., Bares, R., Buell, U., Baumann, I., Harms, H., Kuse, R., Wilms, K., Müller-Hermelink, H. K., Baurmann, H., Cherif, D., Berger, R., Becker, K., Zeller, W., Helmchen, U., Hossfeld, D. K., Bentrup, I., Plusczyk, T., Kemkes-Matthes, B., Matthes, K., Bentz, M., Speicher, M., Schröder, M., Moos, M., Döhner, H., Lichter, P., Stilgenbauer, S., Korfel, A., Harnoss, B. -M., Boese-Landgraf, J., May, E., Kreuser, E. -D., Thiel, E., Karacas, T., Jahn, B., Lautenschläger, G., Szepes, S., Fenchel, K., Mitrou, P. S., Hoelzer, D., Heil, G., Lengfelder, E., Puzicha, E., Martin, H., Beyer, J., Kleiner, S., Strohscheer, I., Schwerdtfeger, R., Schwella, N., Schmidt-Wolf, I., Siegert, W., Weyer, C., arzen, G., Risse, G., Miksits, K., Farshidfar, G., Birken, R., Schilling, C. v., Brugger, W., Holldack, J., Mertelsmann, R., Kanz, L., Blanz, J., Mewes, K., Ehninger, G., Zeller, K. -P., Böhme. A., Just G., Bergmann. L., Shah P., Hoelzer D., Stille W., Bohlen, H., Hopff, T., Kapp, U., Wolf, J., Engert, A., Diehl, V., Tesch, H., Schrader, A., van Rhee, J., Köhne-Wömpner, H., Bokemeyer', C., Gonnermann, D., Harstrick, A., Schöffski, P., van Rhee, J., Schuppert, F., Freund, M., Boos, J., Göring, M., Blaschke, G., Borstel, A., Franke, A., Hüller, G., Uhle, R., Weise, W., Brach, Marion A., Gruss, Hans-Jürgen, Herrmann, Friedhelm, deVos, Sven, Brennscheidt, Ulrich, Riedel, Detlev, Klch, Walter, Bonlfer, Renate, Mertelsmann, Roland, Brieaer, J., Appelhans, H., Brückner, S., Siemens, HJ., Wagner, T., Moecklin, W., Mertelsmann, R., Bertz, H., Hecht, T., Mertelsmann, R., Bühl, K., Eichelbaum, M. G., Ladda, E., Schumacher, K., Weimer, A., Bühling, F., Kunz, D., Lendeckel, U., Reinhold, D., Ulmer, A. J., Flad, H. -D., Ansorge, S., Bühring, Hans-Jörg, Broudy¶, Virginia C., Ashman§, Leonie K., Burk, M., Kunecke, H., Dumont, C., Meckenstock, G., Volmer, M., Bucher, M., Manegold, C., Krenpien, B., Fischer, J. R., Drings, P., Bückner, U., Donhuijsen-Ant, R., Eberhardt, B., Westerhausen, M., Busch, F. W., Jaschonek, K., Steinke, B., Calavrezos, A., Hausmann, K., Solbach, M., Woitowitz, H. -P., Hilierdal, G., Heilmann, H. -P., Chen, Z. J., Frickhofen, N., Ellbrück, D., Schwarz, T. F., Körner, K., Wiest, C., Kubanek, B., Seifried, E., Claudé, R., Brücher, J., Clemens, M. R., Bublitz, K., Bieger, O., Schmid, B., Clemetson, K. J., Clemm, Ch., Bamberg, M., Gerl, A., Weißbach, L., Danhauser-Riedl, S., Schick, H. D., Bender, R., Reuter, M., Dietzfelbinger, H., Rastetter, J., Hanauske, A. -R., Decker, Hans-Jochen, Klauck, Sabine, Seizinger, Bernd, Denfeld, Ralf, Pohl, Christoph, Renner, Christoph, Hombach, Andreas, Jung, Wolfram, Schwonzen, Martin, Pfreundschuh, Michael, Derigs, H. Günter, Boswell, H. Scott, Kühn, D., Zafferani, M., Ehrhardt, R., Fischer, K., Schmitt, M., Witt, B., Ho, A. D., Haas, R., Hunstein, W., Dölken, G., Finke, J., Lange, W., Held, M., Schalipp, E., Fauser, A. A., Mertelsmann, R., Donhuijsen, K., Nabavi, D., Leder, L. D., Haedicke, Ch., Freund, H., Hattenberger, S., Dreger, Peter, Grelle, Karen, Schmitz, Norbert, Suttorp, Meinolf, Müller-Ruchholtz, Wolfgang, Löffler, Helmut, Dumoulin, F. L., Jakschies, D., Walther, M., Hunger, P., Deicher, H., von Wussow, P., Dutcher, J. P., Ebell, W., Bender-Götze, C., Bettoni, C., Niethammer, D., Reiter, A., Sauter, S., Schrappe, M., Riehm, H., Niederle, N., Heidersdorf, H., Müller, M. R., Mengelkoch, B., Vanhoefer, U., Stahl, M., Budach, V., loehren, B., Alberti, W., Nowrousian, M. R., Seeber, S., Wilke, H., Stamatis, G., Greschuchna, D., Sack, H., Konietzko, N., Krause, B., Dopfer, R., Schmidt, H., Einsele, H., Müller, C. A., Goldmann, S. F., Grosse-Wilde, H., Waller, H. D., Libal, B., Hohaus, S., Gericke, G., von Eiff, M., Oehme, A., Roth, B., van de Loo, J., von Eiff, K., Pötter, R., Weiß, H., Suhr, B., Koch, P., Roos, H., van de Loo, J., Meuter, V., Heissig, B., Schick, F., Duda, S., Saal, J. G., Klein, R., Steidle, M., Eisner, S., Ganser, A., Seipelt, G., Leonhardt, M., Engelhard, M., Brittinger, G., Gerhartz, H., Meusers, P., Aydemir, Ü., Tintrup, W., Tiemann, H., Lennert, K., Esser, B., Hirsch, F. W., Evers, C., Riess, H., Lübbe, A., Greil, R., Köchling, A., Digel, D., Bross, K. J., Dölken, G., Mertelsmann, R., Gencic S., Ostermann, M., Baum, R. P., Fiebig, H. H., Berger, D. P., Dengler, W. A., Winterhalter, B. R., Hendriks, H., Schwartsmann, G., Pinedo, H. M., Ternes, P., Mertelsmann, R., Dölken, G., Fischbach, W., Zidianakis, Z., Lüke, G., Kirchner, Th., Mössner, J., Fischer, Thomas, Haque, Saikh J., Kumar, Aseem, Rutherford, Michael N., Williams, Bryan R. G., Flohr, T., Decker, T., Thews, A., Hild, F., Dohmen, M., von Wussow, P., Grote-Metke, A., Otremba, B., Fonatsch, C., Binder, T., Imhof, C., Feller, A. C., Fruehauf, S., Moehle, R., Hiddemann Th., Büchner M. Unterhalt, Wörmann, B., Ottmann, O. G., Verbeek, G. W., Seipelt A. Maurer, Geissler, G., Schardt, C., Reutzel, R., Hiddemann, W., Maurer, A., Hess, U., Lindemann, A., Frisch, J., Schulz, G., Mertelsmann, R., Hoelzer, P., Gassmann, W., Sperling, C., Uharek, L., Becher, R., Weh, H. J., Tirier, C., Hagemann, F. G., Fuhr, H. G., Wandt, H., Sauerland, M. C., Gause, A., Spickermann, D., Klein, S., Pfreund-schuh, M., Gebauer, W., Fallgren-Gebauer, E., Geissler, R. G., Mentzel, U., Kleiner, K., Rossol, R., Guba, P., Kojouharoff, G., Gerdau, St., Körholz, D., Klein-Vehne, A., Burdach, St., Gerdemann M., Maurer J., Gerhartz, H. H., Schmetzer, H., Mayer, P., Clemm, C., Hentrich, M., Hartenstein, R., Kohl, P., Gieseler, F., Boege, F., Enttmann, R., Meyer, P., Glass, B., Zeis, M., Loeffler, H., Mueller-Ruchholtz, W., Görg, C., Schwerk, W. B., Köppler, H., Havemann, K., Goldschmitt, J., Goldschmidt, H., Nicolai, M., Richter, Th., Blau, W., Hahn, U., Kappe, R., Leithäuser, F., Gottstein, Claudia, Schön, Gisela, Dünnebacke, Markus, Berthold, Frank, Gramatzki, M., Eger, G., Geiger, M., Burger, R., Zölch, A., Bair, H. J., Becker, W., Griesinger, F., Elfers, H., Griesser, H., Grundner-Culemann, E., Neubauer, V., Fricke, D., Shalitin, C., Benter, T., Mertelsmann, R., Dölken, Gottfried, Mertelsmann, Roland, Günther, W., Schunmm, M., Rieber, P., Thierfelder, S., Gunsilius, E., Kirstein, O., Bommer, M., Serve, H., Hülser, P. -J., Del Valle F., Fischer J. Th., Huberts H., Kaplan E., Haase, D., Halbmayer, W. -M., Feichtinger, Ch., Rubi, K., Fischer, M., Hallek, M., Lepislo, E. M., Griffin, J. D., Emst, T. J., Druker, B., Eder, M., Okuda, K., D.Griffin, J., Kozłowska-Skrzypczak, K., Meyer, B., Reile, D., Scharnofske, M., Hapke, G., Aulenbacher, P., Havemann, K., Becker, N., Scheller, S., Zugmaier, G., Pralle, H., Wahrendorf, J., Heide, Immo, Thiede, Christian, de Kant, Eric, Neubauer, Andreas, Herrmann, Richard, Rochlitz, Christoph, Heiden, B., Depenbrock, H., Block, T., Vogelsang, H., Schneider, P., Fellbaum, Ch., Heidtmann, H. -H., Blings, B., Havemann, K., Fackler-Schwalbe, E., Schlimok, G., Lösch, A., Queißer, W., Löffler, B., Kurrle, E., Chadid, L., Lindemann, A., Mertelsmann, R., Nicolay, U., Gaus, W., Heinemann, V., Jehn, U., Gleixner, B., Wachholz, W., Scholz, P., Plunkett, W., Heinze, B., Novotny, J., Hess, Georg, Gamm, Heinold, Seliger, Barbara, Heuft, H. G., Oettle, H., Zeiler, T., Eckstein, R., Heymanns, J., Havemann, K., Hladik, F., Hoang-Vu, C., Horn, R., Cetin, Y., Scheumann, G., Dralle, H., Köhrle, J., von zur Mühlen, A., Brabant, G., Hochhaus, A., Mende, S., Simon, M., Fonatsch, Ch., Heinze, B., Georgii, A., Hötzl, Ch., Hintermeier-Knabe, R., Kempeni, J., Kaul, M., Hoetzl, Ch., Clemm, Ch., Lauter, H., Hoffknecht, M. M., Eckardt, N., Hoffmann-Fezer, G., Gall, C., Kranz, B., Zengerle, U., Pfoersich, M., Birkenstock, U., Pittenann, E., Heinz, B., Hosten, N., Schörner, W., Kirsch, A., Neumann, K., Felix, R., Humpe, A., Kiss, T., Trümper, L. H., Messner, H. A., Hundt, M., Zielinska-Skowronek, M., Schubert, J., Schmidt, R. E., Huss, R., Storb, R., Deeg, H. J., Issels, R. 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A., Porzsolt, F., Prümmer, O., Krüger, A., Schrezenmeier, H., Schlander, H., Pineo, G., Marin, P., Gluckman, E., Shahidi, N. T., Bacigalupo, A., Ratajczak, M. Z., Gewirtz, A. M., Ratei, R., Borner, K., Bank, U., Bühling, F., Reisbach, G., Bartke, L., Kempkes, B., Kostka, G., Ellwart, X., Birner, A., Bornkamm, G. W., Ullrich, A., Dörmer, P., Henze, G., Parwaresch, R., Müller-Weihrich, S. T., Klingebiel, Th., Odenwald, E., Brandhorst, D., Tsuruo, T., Wetter, O., Renner, C., Pohl, C., Sahin, U., Renner, U., Zeller, K. -P., Repp, R., Valerius, Th., Sendler, A., Kalden, J. R., PIatzer, E., Reuss-Borst, M. A., Bühring, H. J., Reuter, C., der Landwehr, II, U. Auf, der Landwehr, II, U. Auf, Schleyer, E., Rolf, C., Ridwelski, K., Matthias, M., Preiss, R., Riewald, M., Puzo, A., Serke, S., Rohrer, B., Pfeiffer, D., Hepp, H., Romanowski, R., Schött, C., Rüther, U., Rothe, B., Pöllmann, H., Nunnensiek, C., Schöllhammer, T., Ulshöfer, Th., Bader, H., Jipp, P., Müller, H. A. 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J., Lefterova, P., Laser, J., Schmitz, G., Rothe, G., Schönfeld, S., Schulz, S., Nyce, J. W., Graf, N., Ludwig, R., Steinhauser, I., Brommer, A. E., Qui, H., Schroeder, M., Grote-Kiehn, J., Bückner, U., Rüger, I., Schröder, J., Meusers, P., Weimar, Ch., Schoch, C., Schröter, G., Stern, H., Buchwald, B., Schick, K., Avril, N., Flierdt, E. v. d., Langhammer, H. R., Pabst, H. W., Alvarado, M., Witte, T., Vogt, H., Schuler, U., Brammer, K., Klann, R. C., Schumm, M., Hahn, J., Günther, W., Wullich, B., Moringlane, J. R., Schöndorf, S., Schwartz, S., Bühring, H. -J., Notter, M., Böttcher, S., Martin, M., Schmid, H., Lübbe, A. S., Leib-Mösch C., Wankmüller, H., Eilbrück, D., Funke, I., Cardoso, M., Duranceyk, H., Seitz, R., Rappe, N., Kraus, H., Egbring, R., Haasberg, M., Havemann, K., Seibach, J., Wollscheid, Ursula, Serke, St., Zimmermann, R., Shirai, T., Umeda, M., Anno, S., Kosuge, T., Katoh, M., Moro, S., Su, C. -Y., Shikoshi, K., Arai, N., Schwieder, G., Silling-Engelhardt, G., Zühlsdorf, M., Aguion-Freire-Innig, E., van de Loo, J., Stockdreher, K., Gatsch, L., Tischler, H. -J., Ringe, B., Diedrich, H., Franzi, A., Kruse, E., Lück, R., Trenn, G., Sykora, J., Wen, T., Fung-Leung, W. P., Mak, T. W., Brady, G., Loke, S., Cossman, J., Gascoyne, R., Mak, T., Urasinski, I., Zdziarska, B., Usnarska-Zubkiewicz, L., Kotlarek-Haus, S., Sciborskl, R., Nowosad, H., Kummer, G., Schleucher, N., Preusser, P., Niebel, W., Achterrath, W., Pott, D., Eigler, F. -W., Venook, A., Stagg, R., Frye, J., Gordon, R., Ring, E., Verschuer, U. v., Baur, F., Heit, W., Corrons, J. L. L. Vives, Vogel, M., Nekarda, H., Remy, W., Bissery, M. C., Aapro, M., Buchwald-Pospiech, A., Kaltwasser, J. P., Jacobi, V., de Vos, Sven, Asano, Yoshinobu, Voss, Harald, Knuth, Alexander, Wiedemann, G., Komischke, B., Horisberger, R., Wussow, P. v., Wanders, L., Senekowitsch, R., Strohmeyer, S., Emmerich, B., Selbach, J., Gutensohn, K., Wacker-Backhaus, G., Winkeimann, M., Send, W., Rösche, J., Weide, R., Parviz, B., Havemann, K., Weidmann, B., Henss, H., Engelhardt, R., Bernards, P., Zeidler, D., Jägerbauer, E., Colajori, E., Kerpel-Fronius, S., Weiss, A., Buchheidt, D., Döring, A., D.Saeger, H., Weissbach, L., Emmler, J., Wermes, R., Meusers, P., Flasshove, M., Skorzec, M., Käding, J., Platow, S., Winkler, Ute, Thorpe, Philip, Winter, S. F., Minna, J. D., Nestor, P. J., Johnson, B. E., Gazdar, A. F., Havemann, K., Carbone, D. P., Wit, M. de, Bittner, S., Hossfeld, D., Wittmann, G., Borchelt, M., Steinhagen-Thiessen, E., Koch, K., Brosch, T., Haas, N., Wölfel, C., Knuth, A., Wölfel, T., Safford, M., Könemann, S., Zurlutter, K., Schreiber, K., Piechotka, K., Drescher, M., Toepker, S., Terstappen, L. W. M. M., Bullerdiek, J., Jox, A., zur Hausen, H., Wolters, B., Stenzinger, W., Woźny, T., Sawiński, K., Kozłowska-Skrzypczak, M., Wussow, P. v., Hochhaus, T., Ansarl, H., Prümmer, O., Zapf, H., Thorban, S., Präuer, H., Zeller, W., Stieglitz, J. v., Dürken, M., Greenshaw, C., Kabisch, H., Reuther, C., Knabbe, C., Lippman, M., Havemann, K., Wellstein, A., Degos, L., Castaigne, S., Fenaux, P., Chomienne, C., Raza, A., Preisler, H. D., PEG Interventional Antimicrobial Strategy Study Group, Interventional Antimicrobial Strategy Study Group of the Paul Ehrlich Society (PEG), and H. Riehm for the BFM study group
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- 1992
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19. Scientific Proceedings Second International Symposium on Cytostatic Drug Resistance
- Author
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Hill, Bridget T., Hosking, L. K., McClean, S., Shellard, S. A., Dempke, W. C. M., Whelan, R. D. H., Sehested, M., Friche, E., Demant, E. J. F., Jensen, P. B., Kopnin, B. P., Wolf, B., Seidel, A., Nickelsen, M., Brandt, I., Heinemann, G., Dietel, M., Bremer, S., Hoof, T., Tümmler, B., Broxterman, H. J., Versantvoort, C. H. M., Kuiper, C. M., Feller, N., Schuurhuis, G. J., Lankelma, J., Gupta, S., Tsuruo, T., Kim, C., Gollapudi, S., Bittl, A., Nap, M., Jäger, W., Lathan, B., Lang, N., Raikhlin, N. T., Perevozchikov, A. G., Volodina, J. L., Licht T., Fiebig H. H., Bross K. J., Herrmann F., Mertelsmann R., Bashir, I., Sikora, K., Foster, C. S., Castagna, M., Viacava, P., Cianfrigliao, M., Favati, A., Collecchi, P., Caligo, M. A., Cipollini, G., Bevilacqua, G., Schrenk, D., Gant, T. W., Silverman, J. A., Thorgeirsson, S. S., Harstrick, A., Zhang, Z. G., Schmoll, H. J., Rustum, Y., Mitze, M., Beck, T., Weikel, W., Brumm, C., Knapstein, P. G., McDonald, T., Gardner, P., Kang, N., van der Heyden, S. A. M., Elst, H. J., Stein, U., Jandrig, B., Krause, H., Schmidt-Peter, P., Frege, J., Wunderlich, V., Boven, E., van Kalken, C. K., Pinedo, H. M., Gebauer, W., Fallgren-Gebauer, E., Diete, M., Wagner, T., Müller, M. R., Lennartz, K., Nowrousian, H. R., Seeber, S., Shtil, A. A., Kazarov, A. R., Gudkov, A. V., Stavrovskaya, A. A., Djuraeva, F. H., Stromskaya, T. P., Noller, A., Frese, G., Neumann, M., Wilisch, A., Probst, H., Gekeler, V., Handgretinger, R., Schmidt, H., Muller, C. P., Dopfer, R., Klingebiel, T., Niethammer, D., Weger, S., Diddens, H., Daumiller, E., Bunge, A., Lilischkis, R., Salmassi, A., Kopun M., Scherthan H., Granzow C., Leuschner, I., Schmidt, D., Hoffmann, H., Harms, D., Scagliotli, G. V., Leonardo, E., Cappia, S., Esposito, G., Tombesi, M., Cianfriglia, M., Esposito, G. V., Merendino, N., Viora, M., Caserta, M., Tritarelli, E., Rocca, E., Boccoli, G., Samoggia, P., Fossati, C., Testa, U., Peschle, C., Darling, J. L., Ashmore, S. M., Peterson, D. C., Thomas, D. G. T., Kramer, R. A., Stanlunas, R., Summerhayes, T., Lion, T., Shoemaker, R. H., Wu, L., Smythe, A., Boyd, M. R., Beck, W. T., Danks, M. K., Wolverton, J. S., Chen, M., Bugg, B. Y., Suttle, D. P., Catapano, C. V., Fernandes, D. J., Gieseler, F., Boege, F., Erttmann, R., Arps, H., Zwelling, L., Wilms, K., Biersack, H., Kaspers, G. J. L., Pieters, R., Klumper, E., de Waal, F. C., van Wering, E. R., Veerman, A. J. P., Schmidt, C. A., Lorenz, F., Schäfer, A., Kirsch, A., Siegert, W., Huhn, D., Simon, W. E., Siebert, G., Schneider, M., Oettling, M., Reymann, A., Entmann, R., Schmidt, S., Woermann, C., Windmeier, C., Herzig, I., Schaefer, B., Heidebrecht, H. J., Wacker, H. H., Künnemann, H., van Heijningen, Th. H. M., Slovak, M. L., Baak, J. P. A., Steidtmann, K., Fichtinger-Schepman, A. -M. J., Hill, B. I., Scanlon, K. J., Zeller, W. J., Chen, G., Gietema, J. A., de Vries, E. G. E, Sleijfer, D.Th, Willemse, P. H. B., Guchelaar, H. J., Uges, D. R. A., Aulenbacher, P., Voegeli, R., Mulder, N. H., Skrezek, C., Bertermann, H., Eichholtz-Wirth, H., Born, R., Bier, H., Koch, M., Bernhardt, G., Hählen, K., Reile, H., van Zantwijk, C. H., Wering, E. R. van, Görögh, T., Lippert, B., Werner, J. A., Eickbohm, J. E., Mickiseh, G. H., Gottesman, M. M., Pastan, I., Hofmann, J., Wolf, A., Spitaler, M., Bock, G., Grunicke, H., Ponstingl, H., Roth, I., Granzow, C., Dörner, C., Erttmann, R., Looft, G., Ossenkoppele, G. J., Scheffer, G. L., Atassi, G., Pierre, A., Kraus, L., Leonce, S., Regnier, G., Dhainaut, A., Ponstingl H., Stöhr M., Rohlff, C., Glazer, R. I., Cho-Chung, Y. S., Höllt, V., Kouba, M., Vogt, G., Allmeier, H., Nissen, N. I., Cros, S., Guilbaud, N., Dunn, T., Berlion, M., Atassi, G., Bizzari, J. P., Messing, A. M., Matuschek, A., Mutter, I., Kiwit, J. C. W., Bastian, L., Goretzki, P. E., Frilling, A., Simon, D., Röher, H. D., Reichle, A., Altmayr, F., Rastetter, J., Erbil, C., Jaques, G., Maasberg, M., Havemann, K., Häußermann, K., Heidebrecht, H. -J., Van de Vrie, W., Gheuens, E. E. O., Durante, N. M. C., De Bruijn, E. A., Marquet, R. L., Van Oosterom, A. T., Eggermont, A. M. M., Stow, M. W., Vickers, S. E., Warr, J. R., Roller, E., Eichelbaum, M., Klumpp, B., Krause, J., Schumacher, K., Hörner, S., Laßmann, A., Traugott, U., Schlick, E., Bürkle, D., Futscher BW, List AF, Dalton WS, Ladda, E., Bühl, K., Weimer, A., Eser, C., Hamprecht, K., Schalk, K. P., Jackisch, C., Brandt, B., Blum, M., Louwen, F., Schulz, K., Hanker, J. P., Rüther, U., Schmidt, A., Müller, H. A. G., Nunnensiek, C., Bader, H., Eisenberger, F., Jipp, P., Niethammer, B., Muller, C., Ling, V., Joncourt, F., Redmond, S., Stöhr, M., Buser, K., Fey, M., Tobler, A., Brunner, K., Gratwohl, A., Cerrry, T., Nuessler, V., Pelka-Fleischer, R., Nerl, C., Beckert, B., Wilmanns, W., Hegewisch-Becker, S., Fliegner, M., Zander, A., Hossfeld, D. K., Blanz, J., Mewes, K., Ehninger, G., Zeller, K. -P., Schuldes, H., Herrmann, G., Boeckmann, W., Schroeder, R., Jonas, D., Zurborn, K. -H., Bruhn, H. D., Uharek, L., Glass, B., Gassmann, W., Loeffler, H., Mueller-Ruohholtz, W., Gassmann W., Glass B., Uharek L., Loeffler H., Mueller-Ruchholtz W., Jaquet, K., Kreipe, H., Felgner, J., Radzun, H. J., Parwaresch, M. R., Kogan EA, Mazurenko NN, Sekamova SM, Wolf, H., Röhe, K., Wilkens, K., Clausen, M., Henze, E., van der Bosch, J., Rüller, S., Schlaak, M., Köhl, U., Schwabe, D., Rohrbach, E., Montag, E., Bauer, S., Cinatl, J., Cinatl, Jr, I., Mainke, M., Geiss, H., Kornhuber, B., Juhl, H., Stritzel, H., Kalhoff, H., Schniegel, W., Menke, T., Pröbsting, B., Schulze-Westhoff, P., Boos, J., Weidner, J., Wedemeyer, N., Wiedorn, K., Ueda, Y., Blasius, S., Wuisman, P., Böcker, W., Roessner, A., Dockhorn-Dworniczak, B., Ramm, D., Knebel, J., Sass, W., Aufderheide, M., and Seifert, J.
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- 1991
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20. Erratum: Correction: DNA Damage, Homology-Directed Repair, and DNA Methylation (PLoS genetics (2007) 3 7 (e110))
- Author
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Cuozzo C., Porcellini A., Angrisano T., Morano A., Lee B., Pardo A. D., Messina S., Iuliano R., Fusco A., Santillo M. R., Muller M. T., Chiariotti L., Gottesman M. E., Avvedimento E. V., Cuozzo, C., Porcellini, A., Angrisano, T., Morano, A., Lee, B., Pardo, A. D., Messina, S., Iuliano, R., Fusco, A., Santillo, M. R., Muller, M. T., Chiariotti, L., Gottesman, M. E., and Avvedimento, E. V.
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.0030110.].
- Published
- 2017
21. Erratum: Mechanism of retinoic acid-induced transcription: Histone code, DNA oxidation and formation of chromatin loops (Nucleic Acids Research (2014) 42:17 (11040-55) DOI: 10.1093/nar/gku823)
- Author
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Zuchegna, C., Aceto, F., Bertoni, A., Romano, A., Perillo, B., Laccetti, P., Gottesman, M. E., Avvedimento, E. V., Porcellini, A., Zuchegna, C., Aceto, F., Bertoni, A., Romano, A., Perillo, B., Laccetti, P., Gottesman, M. E., Avvedimento, E. V., and Porcellini, A.
- Published
- 2014
22. Localization of multidrug resistance-associated DNA sequences to human chromosome 7
- Author
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Fojo, A., Lebo, R., Shimizu, N., Chin, J. E., Roninson, I. B., Merlino, G. T., Gottesman, M. M., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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23. The Biological Functions of A-Kinase Anchor Proteins
- Author
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FELICIELLO, ANTONIO, AVVEDIMENTO, VITTORIO ENRICO, GOTTESMAN M. E., Feliciello, Antonio, Gottesman, M. E., and Avvedimento, VITTORIO ENRICO
- Abstract
cAMP-dependent protein kinase is targeted to discrete subcellular locations by a family of specific anchor proteins (A-kinase anchor proteins, AKAPs). Localization recruits protein kinase A (PKA) holoenzyme close to its substrate/effector proteins, directing and amplifying the biological effects of cAMP signaling. AKAPs include two conserved structural modules: (i) a targeting domain that serves as a scaffold and membrane anchor; and (ii) a tethering domain that interacts with PKA regulatory subunits. Alternative splicing can shuffle targeting and tethering domains to generate a variety of AKAPs with different targeting specificity. Although AKAPs have been identified on the basis of their interaction with PKA, they also bind other signaling molecules, mainly phosphatases and kinases, that regulate AKAP targeting and activate other signal transduction pathways. We suggest that AKAP forms a "transduceosome" by acting as an autonomous multivalent scaffold that assembles and integrates signals derived from multiple pathways. The transduceosome amplifies cAMP and other signals locally and, by stabilizing and reducing the basal activity of PKA, it also exerts long-distance effects. The AKAP transduceosome thus optimizes the amplitude and the signal/noise ratio of cAMP-PKA stimuli travelling from the membrane to the nucleus and other subcellular compartments.
- Published
- 2001
24. daclizumab in active relapsing multiple clerosis (CHOICE study): a phase 2, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, add-on trial with interferon beta
- Author
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Jacques, F, Melanson, M, Kremenchutzky, M, Lapierre, Y, O'Connor, P, Blevins, G, Wandinger, K, Sommer, N, Heesen, C, Pozzilli, C, Gallo, Paolo, Comi, G, Arbizu, T, Fernandez, O, Montalban, X, Casanova, B, Garcia Moreno, A, Absher, J, Cooper, J, Khatri, B, Fox, E, Wynn, D, Picone, M, Herbert, J, Lynch, S, Minagar, A, Carter, J, Sullivan, H, Martin, J, Ford, C, Phillips, T, Kasper, L, Dunn, J, English, J, Steingo, B, Edwards, K, Honeycutt, W, Jacobs, A, Kaufman, M, Freedman, M, Pugh, S, Vollmer, T, Thomas, F, Pirko, I, Markowitz, C, Rose, J, Storey, J, Jeffery, D, Kahn, O, Dickson, R, Gottesman, M, Miller, De, Reingold, Sc, Cutter, G, Wolinsky, J, Freedman, Ms, Edan, G., Wynn, D, Kaufman, M, Montalban, X, Vollmer, T, Simon, J, Elkins, J, O'Neil, G, Neyer, L, Sheridan, J, Wang, C, Comi, Giancarlo, and ROSE JW CHOICE, Investigator
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Daclizumab ,Adolescent ,T-Lymphocytes ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Placebo ,Gastroenterology ,law.invention ,Young Adult ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Immunologic Factors ,Lymphocytes ,Cell Proliferation ,Intention-to-treat analysis ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Brain ,Interferon-beta ,Middle Aged ,Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,CD56 Antigen ,eye diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,Immunoglobulin G ,Pharmacodynamics ,Immunology ,Monoclonal ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background Daclizumab, a humanised monoclonal antibody, reduced multiple sclerosis disease activity in previous non-randomised studies. We aimed to assess whether daclizumab reduces disease activity in patients with active relapsing multiple sclerosis who are receiving interferon beta treatment. Methods We did a phase 2, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study at 51 centres in the USA, Canada, Germany, Italy, and Spain. Patients with active relapsing multiple sclerosis who were taking interferon beta were randomly assigned to receive add-on subcutaneous daclizumab 2 mg/kg every 2 weeks (interferon beta and high-dose daclizumab group), daclizumab 1 mg/kg every 4 weeks (interferon beta and low-dose daclizumab group), or interferon beta and placebo for 24 weeks. The randomisation scheme was generated by Facet Biotech. All patients and assessors were masked to treatment with the exception of Facet Biotech bioanalysts who prepared data for the data safety monitoring board or generated pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic data, a drug accountability auditor, and the site pharmacist. The primary endpoint was total number of new or enlarged gadolinium contrast-enhancing lesions measured on brain MRI scans every 4 weeks between weeks 8 and 24. Effects of daclizumab on prespecified subsets of lymphocytes and quantitative T-cell proliferative response were assessed in an exploratory pharmacodynamic substudy. Analysis was by intention to treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00109161. Findings From May, 2005, to March, 2006, 288 patients were assessed for eligibility, and 230 were randomly assigned to receive interferon beta and high-dose daclizumab (n=75), interferon beta and low-dose daclizumab (n=78), or interferon beta and placebo (n=77). The adjusted mean number of new or enlarged gadolinium contrast-enhancing lesions was 4·75 in the interferon beta and placebo group compared with 1·32 in the interferon beta and high-dose daclizumab group (difference 72%, 95% CI 34% to 88%; p=0·004) and 3·58 in the interferon beta and low-dose daclizumab group (25%, −76% to 68%; p=0·51). In the pharmacodynamic substudy, daclizumab was not associated with significant changes in absolute numbers of T cells, B cells, or natural killer cells, or T-cell proliferative response compared with interferon beta alone. The number of CD56 bright natural killer cells was seven to eight times higher in both daclizumab groups than in the interferon beta and placebo group (interferon beta and low-dose daclizumab group p=0·002; interferon beta and high-dose daclizumab group p Interpretation Add-on daclizumab treatment reduced the number of new or enlarged gadolinium contrast-enhancing lesions compared with interferon beta alone and might reduce multiple sclerosis disease activity to a greater extent than interferon beta alone. Funding Facet Biotech and Biogen Idec.
- Published
- 2010
25. Preservation of light signaling to the suprachiasmatic nucleus in vitamin A-deficient mice
- Author
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Lai, K., Van Gelder, R. N., Quadro, L., Blaner, W. S., Sancar, A., Gottesman, M. E., Thompson, C. L., and Colantuoni, V.
- Subjects
genetic structures ,sense organs - Abstract
To investigate the role of retinal-based pigments (opsins) in circadian photoreception in mice, animals mutated in plasma retinol binding protein were placed on a vitamin A-free diet and tested for photic induction of gene expression in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. After 10 months on the vitamin A-free diet, the majority of mice contained no detectable retinal in their eyes. These mice demonstrated fully intact photic signaling to the suprachiasmatic nucleus as measured by acute mPer mRNA induction in the suprachiasmatic nucleus in response to bright or dim light. The data suggest that a non-opsin pigment is the primary circadian photoreceptor in the mouse.
- Published
- 2001
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26. Exposure to HIV-protease inhibitors selects for increased expression of P-glycoprotein (ABCB1) in Kaposi's sarcoma cells.
- Author
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Lucia, M. B., Anu, R., Handley, M., Gillet, J.-P., Wu, C.-P., De Donatis, G. M., Cauda, R., and Gottesman, M. M.
- Subjects
P-glycoprotein ,PROTEASE inhibitors ,KAPOSI'S sarcoma ,MESSENGER RNA ,DOXORUBICIN ,PACLITAXEL ,THERAPEUTICS ,HIV infection complications ,ANTINEOPLASTIC antibiotics ,CELL lines ,DRUG resistance ,DRUG resistance in cancer cells ,DRUG synergism ,FLOW cytometry ,FLUORESCENT antibody technique ,GENES ,GLYCOPROTEINS ,HETEROCYCLIC compounds ,OLIGOPEPTIDES ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,PYRIDINE ,RESEARCH funding ,WESTERN immunoblotting ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction ,ANTI-HIV agents ,HIV protease inhibitors ,INDINAVIR ,NELFINAVIR ,RITONAVIR ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: Given that HIV-protease inhibitors (HIV-PIs) are substrates/inhibitors of the multidrug transporter ABCB1, can induce ABCB1 expression, and are used in combination with doxorubicin for AIDS-Kaposi's Sarcoma (KS) treatment, the role that ABCB1 plays in mediating multidrug resistance (MDR) in a fully transformed KS cell line (SLK) was explored.Methods: The KS cells were exposed to both acute and chronic treatments of physiological concentrations of different HIV-PIs (indinavir, nelfinavir, atazanavir, ritonavir, or lopinavir), alone or together with doxorubicin. The ABCB1 mRNA and protein expression levels were then assessed by qRT-PCR and western blotting, flow cytometry, and immunofluorescence.Results: Chronic treatment of SLK cells with one of the five HIV-PIs alone or together resulted in increased resistance to doxorubicin. Co-treatment with one of the HIV-PIs in combination with doxorubicin resulted in a synergistic increase in resistance to doxorubicin, and the degree of resistance was found to correlate with the expression of ABCB1. The SLK cells were also revealed to be cross-resistant to the structurally unrelated drug paclitaxel.Conclusion: These studies suggest that ABCB1 is primarily responsible for mediating MDR in SLK cells selected with either HIV-PIs alone or in combination with doxorubicin. Therefore, the roles that ABCB1 and drug cocktails play in mediating MDR in KS in vivo should be evaluated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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27. High-dose cyclophosphamide for moderate to severe refractory multiple sclerosis: 2-year follow-up (investigational new drug No. 65863).
- Author
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Gladstone DE, Peyster R, Baron E, Friedman-Urevich S, Sibony P, Melville P, Gottesman M, Gladstone, Douglas E, Peyster, Robert, Baron, Edward, Friedman-Urevich, Sharon, Sibony, Patrick, Melville, Patricia, and Gottesman, Malcolm
- Published
- 2011
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28. Rapid disease course in African Americans with multiple sclerosis.
- Author
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Kister I, Chamot E, Bacon JH, Niewczyk PM, De Guzman RA, Apatoff B, Coyle P, Goodman AD, Gottesman M, Granger C, Jubelt B, Krupp L, Lenihan M, Lublin F, Mihai C, Miller A, Munschauer FE 3rd, Perel AB, Teter BE, and Weinstock-Guttman B
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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29. IMPACTS project: preparing therapists to provide best practice early intervention services.
- Author
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Case-Smith J, Sainato D, McQuaid J, Deubler D, Gottesman M, and Taber M
- Abstract
The project was a master's level graduate program that prepares occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech and language pathologists, nurses and special educators for early intervention practice. The purpose of this descriptive report is to explain the conceptual framework for the graduate program and to identify themes in students' learning from the portion of the program focused on professional-family relationships-the family practicum. In the family practicum, each student spent 50 hours over 6 months with one family who had a young child with significant disabilities. The students wrote reflective journals during the practicum that revealed how they interpreted their experiences for application to their own practices. Through qualitative analysis of the students' journals, four themes emerged: (1) Acknowledge that parenting a child with a disability is a 24/7 job; (2) Recognize that internal and external resources are essential to family adaptation; (3) Respect parents as the experts on their child; and (4) Accept the family's values. These themes were validated by the families' evaluation of the practicum and provide evidence that students grew in their appreciation of and competence in relationship-centered early intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Cyclosporin A-Dependent Downregulation of the Na+/Ca2+ Exchanger Expression.
- Author
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RAHAMIMOFF, H., ELBAZ, B., ALPEROVICH, A., KIMCHI‐SARFATY, C., GOTTESMAN, M. M., LICHTENSTEIN, Y., ESKIN‐SHWARTZ, M., and KASIR, J.
- Subjects
CYCLOSPORINE ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents ,HYPERTENSION ,NEPHROTOXICOLOGY ,SODIUM ,CALCIUM ,MUTAGENESIS ,BODY fluid analysis - Abstract
Cyclosporin A (CsA) is an immunosuppressive drug commonly given to transplant patients. Its application is accompanied by severe side effects related to calcium, among them hypertension and nephrotoxicity. The Na
+ /Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) is a major calcium regulator expressed in the surface membrane of all excitable and many nonexcitable tissues. Three genes, NCX1, NCX2, and NCX3 code for Na+ /Ca2+ exchange activity. NCX1 gene products are the most abundant. We have shown previously that exposure of NCX1-transfected HEK 293 cells to CsA, leads to concentration-dependent reduction of Na+ /Ca2+ exchange activity and surface expression, without a reduction in total cell-expressed NCX1 protein. We show now that the effect of CsA on NCX1 protein expression is not restricted to transfected cells overexpressing the NCX1 protein but exhibited also in cells expressing endogenously the NCX1 protein (L6, H9c2, and primary smooth muscle cells). Exposure of NCX2- and NCX3-transfected cells to CsA results also in reduction of Na+ /Ca2+ exchange activity and surface expression, though the sensitivity to the drug was lower than in NCX1-transfected cells. Studying the molecular mechanism of CsA–NCX interaction suggests that cyclophilin (Cyp) is involved in NCX1 protein expression and its modulation by CsA. Deletion of 426 amino acids from the large cytoplasmic loop of the protein retains the CsA-dependent downregulation of the truncated NCX1 suggesting that CsA–Cyp–NCX interaction involves the remaining protein domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
31. Interferon beta-1b (Betaseron®/Betaferon®) is well tolerated at a dose of 500 mg: interferon dose escalation assessment of safety (IDEAS).
- Author
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Gottesman, M. H. and Friedman-Urevich, S.
- Subjects
- *
DRUG dosage , *MULTIPLE sclerosis , *DRUG administration , *INTERFERONS , *CLINICAL trials , *ANTIVIRAL agents - Abstract
The approved interferon beta-1b (Betaseron®/Betaferon®) dose is 250 μg (8 MIU) administered subcutaneously (sc) every other day (eod). Clinical trial data suggest a dose–response effect for interferon beta in multiple sclerosis (MS) treatment and a maximum dose has yet to be established. The Interferon Dose Escalation Assessment of Safety (IDEAS) study evaluated the safety and tolerability of interferon beta-1b 500 μg (16 MIU) sc eod with structured dose escalation and adverse event (AE) management in 22 patients (20 interferon beta-1b-treated (SD) and two interferon beta-1b-naïve (ND)) with relapsing-remitting (RR) MS, secondary-progressive (SP) MS, or progressive relapsing MS. IDEAS comprised an eight-week dose escalation period and a 12-week maintenance period, with modification as clinically warranted. Autoinjectors were used for all injections ≥0.4 mL. Clinical laboratory values were monitored monthly. Baseline and exit assessments included the MS Functional Composite score, EDSS, and neutralizing antibody MxA assay. AEs were recorded at every injection. Dose escalation ranged from two to 12 weeks. Some 91% of patients (20/22) achieved the 500-μg dose, and of these 90% (18/20) completed the maintenance phase. There were no differences in response between ND and SD patients. Most common AEs were decreased general well-being, insomnia, and injection site reactions (mostly mild). The 500-mg dose of interferon beta-1b was well tolerated in the short-term with escalation and premedication in these patients, most of whom had previously been receiving 250 μg interferon beta-1b. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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- View/download PDF
32. Reduced expression of small GTPases and hypermethylation of the folate binding protein gene in cisplatin-resistant cells.
- Author
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Shen, D.-W., Su, A., Liang, X,-J., Pai-Panandiker, A., and Gottesman, M. M.
- Subjects
GUANOSINE triphosphatase ,CISPLATIN ,CANCER ,METAL-ammonia compounds ,ENDOCYTOSIS ,FOLIC acid - Abstract
Reduced accumulation of cisplatin is the most consistent feature seen in cisplatin-resistant (CP-r) cells that are cross-resistant to other cytotoxic compounds, such as methotrexate. In this report, defective uptake of a broad range of compounds, including [(14)C]-carboplatin, [(3)H]MTX, [(3)H]folic acid (FA), [(125)I]epidermal growth factor, (59)Fe, [(3)H]glucose, and [(3)H]proline, as well as (73)As(5+) and (73)As(3+), was detected in CP-r human hepatoma and epidermal carcinoma cells that we have previously shown are defective in fluid-phase endocytosis. Downregulation of several small GTPases, such as rab5, rac1, and rhoA, which regulate endocytosis, was found in CP-r cells. However, expression of an early endosomal protein and clathrin heavy chain was not changed, suggesting that the defective endocytic pathway is clathrin independent. Reduced expression of the cell surface protein, folate-binding protein (FBP), which is a carrier for the uptake of MTX, was also observed in the CP-r cells by confocal immunofluorescence microscopy and Real-Time PCR. Reactivation of the silenced FBP gene in the CP-r cells by a DNA demethylation agent, 2-deoxy-5-aza-cytidine (DAC) demonstrates that hypermethylation occurred in the CP-r cells. The uptake of [(14)C]carboplatin, [(3)H]FA, and [(3)H]MTX increased in an early stage CP-r cell line (KB-CP1) after treatment with DAC. Both a defective endocytic pathway and DNA hypermethylation resulting in the downregulation of small regulatory GTPases and cell surface receptors contribute to the reduced accumulation of a broad range of compounds in CP-r cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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33. Characterization of an MDR1 retroviral bicistronic vector for correction of X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency.
- Author
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Kleiman, S E, Pastan, I, Puck, J M, and Gottesman, M M
- Subjects
GENETIC vectors ,IMMUNODEFICIENCY ,X chromosome abnormalities ,RETROVIRUSES - Abstract
X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) is a hereditary disorder characterized by severe T cell lymphopenia and abnormal B cell function. The disease is caused by mutations in IL2RG, the gene encoding the interleukin-2 receptor common γ chain (γc) shared by several interleukin receptors. A Harvey retroviral bicistronic vector containing an IL2RG cDNA and cDNA encoding the multidrug transporter (MDR1) was constructed to investigate the correction of XSCID. Translation of the MDR1 cDNA is achieved from an internal ribosome entry site (IRES). Mouse fibroblasts transfected or transduced with the vector expressed both membrane proteins as detected with specific monoclonal antibodies by fluorescence activated cell sorting. Two human XSCID B cell lines were transduced using a filter concentration method in combination with phosphate depletion. Significant expression of both proteins was detected by Western blot analysis. This construct might be particularly useful if high expression of γc is required, as might be achievable through in vivo selection for drug resistance of recipient lymphocytes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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34. Multidrug Resistance.
- Author
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Pastan, I and Gottesman, M M
- Published
- 1991
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35. Biochemistry of Multidrug Resistance Mediated by the Multidrug Transporter.
- Author
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Gottesman, M M and Pastan, I
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Control of Transcription Termination.
- Author
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Adhya, S and Gottesman, M
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. MDA435/LCC6 and MDA435/LCC6MDR1: ascites models of human breast cancer.
- Author
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Leonessa, F, Green, D, Licht, T, Wright, A, Wingate-Legette, K, Lippman, J, Gottesman, MM, Clarke, R, and Gottesman, M M
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. MDR1 transcript levels as an indication of resistant disease in acute myelogenous leukaemia.
- Author
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Sato, H., Preisler, H., Day, R., Raza, A., Larson, R., Browman, G., Goldberg, J., Vogler, R., Grunwald, H., Gottlieb, A., Bennett, J., Gottesman, M., and Pastan, I.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Neutralizing antibodies to 500 kg interferon beta-1b: 28-month results of the IDEAS extension trial.
- Author
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Gottesman, M. H., Friedman-Urevich, S., Boylan, E., and Cheng, D.
- Subjects
- *
IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *INTERFERONS , *MULTIPLE sclerosis , *DRUG efficacy , *LABORATORIES , *DEMYELINATION , *PATIENTS - Abstract
The Interferon Dose Escalation Assessment of Safety extension trial monitored neutralizing antibodies to interferon beta-1b in patients who currently or had previously received the double dose (500 μg) for up to 28 months. Fifteen patients entered the extension trial; five patients were neutralizing antibody-positive at the start of the trial. The present study demonstrates that when neutralizing antibodies develop in patients receiving higher doses of interferon beta-1b they tend to persist for a prolonged period, although neutralizing antibody titers tend to decrease over time and some patients may revert to neutralizing antibody-negative status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Mechanism of retinoic acid-induced transcription: histone code, DNA oxidation and formation of chromatin loops.
- Author
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Zuchegna, C., Aceto, F., Bertoni, A., Romano, A., Perillo, B., Laccetti, P., Gottesman, M. E., Avvedimento, E. V., and Porcellini, A.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Parity versus nulliparity association with long-term multiple sclerosis disease progression.
- Author
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Teter B, Mihai C, Drake A, Apatoff B, Christodoulou C, Coyle P, Frontera A, Gauthier S, Goodman A, Gottesman M, Granger C, Herbert J, Holub R, Jubelt B, Krupp L, Lava N, Lenihan M, Lublin F, Miller A, and Munschauer F III
- Published
- 2008
42. Expression of a bacterial gene turned on by a potent carcinogen
- Author
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Levine, A., Moreau, P.L., Sedgwick, S.G., Devoret, R., Adhya, S., Gottesman, M., and Das, A.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Melanosomal sequestration of cytotoxic drugs contributes to the intractability of malignant melanomas
- Author
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Gottesman, M.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A survey of soil salinity and groundwater level control systems in irrigated fields in the Jezre’el Valley, Israel
- Author
-
Benyamini, Y., Mirlas, V., Marish, S., Gottesman, M., Fizik, E., and Agassi, M.
- Subjects
- *
SALINITY , *SOILS , *WATER table , *DRAINAGE , *HYDRAULIC engineering - Abstract
Abstract: The Jezre’el Valley, Israel has inherent drainage problems; high water tables are common. Intensive irrigation has led to the development of salinity problems. A number of drainage system designs were installed in the same field to manage the prevailing causes of the salinity hazards. The shallow drainage system was designed to prevent damage to the winter crops and especially to enable early seeding of summer crops. The deep drainage system was designed to maintain a relatively low water table, thereby avoiding concentration of salts in the root zone. The combined drainage system with relief wells was designed to relief upward hydraulic pressure exerted by the semi-confined shallow aquifer. To study the mechanisms of salinization and the nature of the water table regime, soil salinity and water table monitoring systems were installed perpendicular to the parallel subsurface drains. The water table monitoring systems consisted of batteries of piezometers installed at different depths and located between the drainage lines. The most efficient method of drainage was found to be a combination of shallow and deep drains with relief wells wherever the semi-confined shallow aquifer was present. A noticeable improvement of the soil salinity, to below 4dS/m, was observed 2–3 years after the drainage system was installed. It was found that the water table should be more than 1m below the soil surface, in the spring season, to prevent soil salinization. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Leptospirosis in febrile men ingesting Agouti paca in South America.
- Author
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Silverman, M. S., Aronson, L., Eccles, M., Eisenstat, J., Gottesman, M., Rowsell, R., Ferron, M., and Scolnik, D.
- Subjects
- *
LEPTOSPIROSIS , *PACA , *INGESTION , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay , *PHAGOCYTOSIS , *SEROLOGY - Abstract
To explore the relationship between the ingestion of Agouti paca (AP) and human leptospirosis in Guyana, 19 febrile men who said they had hunted and eaten A. paca were screened for malaria, using bloodsmears, and for leptospirosis, using an enzyme immuno-assay that detects Leptospira-specific IgM. Those found positive for anti-Leptospira IgM were then evaluated further, with a microscopical agglutination test based on a limited panel of serovars from three pathogenic species of Leptospira. Although six of die 18 patients who provided suitable samples for the serology were found seropositive for acute leptospirosis, only three of the 19 patients were found smear-positive for malaria, A clinical-decision model, based on medical histories, the results of physical examinations, and the use of routine urine dipsticks, and enabling prediction of the serological results, was developed. This model, which had 83% sensitivity and 100% specificity for leptospirosis, indicated that, in the absence of serology, most febrile patients reporting AP ingestion could be correctly treated if each was checked for malaria using traditional bloodsmears. The smear-positives should be treated with antimalarial drugs whereas the smear-negatives should be treated for leptospirosis if they had any of the following: a skin rash; lymphadenopathy; abnormal urine sediment (proteinuria or haematuria); and/or no previous history of malaria. In the present study, the relative risk of leptospirosis among the patients who were smear-negative for malaria and fulfilled at least one of these four criteria was 13 (P=0.0007). In Guyana at least, leptospirosis appears to be common among men who hunt, prepare and ingest AP. Vaccines may be the best, practical form of protection among such men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
46. Thyroid hormone distribution in the mouse brain: the role of transthyretin1<FN ID="FN1"><NO>1</NO>Presented in part in the abstract form to the Society for Neuroscience meeting in San Diego, CA, USA, November 2001.</FN>
- Author
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Palha, J.A., Nissanov, J., Fernandes, R., Sousa, J.C., Bertrand, L., Dratman, M.B., Morreale de Escobar, G., Gottesman, M., and Saraiva, M.J.
- Subjects
- *
THYROXINE , *CARRIER proteins , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid - Abstract
Transthyretin is the major thyroxine-binding protein in the plasma of rodents, and the main thyroxine-binding protein in the cerebrospinal fluid of both rodents and humans. The choroid plexus synthesizes transthyretin and secretes it to the cerebrospinal fluid. Although it was suggested that transthyretin might play an important role in mediating thyroxine transfer from the blood into the brain across the choroid plexus–cerebrospinal fluid barrier, newer findings question this hypothesis. Because thyroid hormone passage across brain barriers is a precondition for its action in the CNS, and because brain is an important target of thyroid hormone action, we investigated the role of transthyretin in mediating thyroid hormone access to and distribution within the brain in a transthyretin-null mouse model system. In this report we describe the results derived from use of film autoradiography, a technique that yields definitive morphological results. Film autoradiograms were prepared at 3 and 19 h after intravenous injection of either high specific activity [125I]thyroxine or [125I]triiodothyronine. Image analyses were designed to demonstrate regional changes in hormone distribution, and to highlight alterations in iodothyronine delivery from ventricles to brain parenchyma. We find no qualitative or quantitative differences in these parameters between the transthyretin-null and the wild-type mouse brain after either [125I]thyroxine or [125I]triiodothyronine administration.The data presented here now provide definitive evidence that, under standard laboratory conditions, transthyretin is not required for thyroid hormone access to or distribution within the mouse brain. This study also provides the first map of iodothyronine distribution in the brain of the mouse. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Expression of the human multidrug transporter in insect cells by a recombinant baculovirus
- Author
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Gottesman, M [National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD (USA)]
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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48. Photosensitized labeling of a functional multidrug transporter in living drug-resistant tumor cells
- Author
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Gottesman, M [National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD (USA)]
- Published
- 1990
49. Human Mulidrug-Resistant Cell Lines: Increased mdrl Expression Can Precede Gene Amplificaton.
- Author
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SHEN, D.-W., FOJO, A., CHIN, J. E., RONINSON, I. B., RICHERT, N., PASTAN, I., and GOTTESMAN, M. M.
- Abstract
The development of simultaneous resistance to multiple structurally unrelated drugs is a major impediment to cancer chemotherapy. Multidrug resistance in human KB carcinoma cells selected in colchicine, vinblastine, or Adriamycin is associated with amplification of specific DNA sequences (the multidrug resistance locus, mdrl). During colchicine selection resistance is initially accompanied by elevated expression of a 4.5-kilobase mdrl messenger RNA (mRNA) without amplification of the corresponding genomic sequences. During selection for inceased levels of resistance, expression of this mRNA is increased simultaneously with amplification of mdrl DNA. Increased expression and amplification of mdrl sequences were also found-in multidrug-resistant sublines of human leukemia and ovarian carcinoma cells. These results suggest that increased expression ofmdrl mRNA is a common mechanism for multidrug resistance in human cells. Activation of the mdrl gene by mutations or epigenetic changes may precede its amplification during the development of resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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50. PTPD1 supports receptor stability and mitogenic signaling in bladder cancer cells
- Author
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Monia Porpora, Mario Galgani, Massimo Mascolo, Maria Quarto, Domenico di Lorenzo, Margherita Santoriello, Corrado Garbi, Luigi Insabato, Annalisa Carlucci, Max E. Gottesman, Vincenzo Altieri, Antonio Feliciello, Luigi Terracciano, Carlucci, A., Porpora, M., Garbi, Corrado, Galgani, M., Santoriello, M., Mascolo, Massimo, di Lorenzo, D., Altieri, V., Quarto, Maria, Terracciano, L., Gottesman, M. E., Insabato, Luigi, and Feliciello, Antonio
- Subjects
Receptor recycling ,Endosome ,Kinesins ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,Cell Movement ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Gene Silencing ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Cytoskeleton ,Cell Biology ,Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Non-Receptor ,Actin cytoskeleton ,Actins ,Cell biology ,ErbB Receptors ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,HEK293 Cells ,Endocytic vesicle ,Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ,Cancer cell ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
PTPD1, a cytosolic non-receptor protein-tyrosine phosphatase, stimulates the Src-EGF transduction pathway. Localization of PTPD1 at actin cytoskeleton and adhesion sites is required for cell scattering and migration. Here, we show that during EGF stimulation, PTPD1 is rapidly recruited to endocytic vesicles containing the EGF receptor. Endosomal localization of PTPD1 is mediated by interaction with KIF16B, an endosomal kinesin that modulates receptor recycling at the plasma membrane. Silencing of PTPD1 promotes degradation of EGF receptor and inhibits downstream ERK signaling. We also found that PTPD1 is markedly increased in bladder cancer tissue samples. PTPD1 levels positively correlated with the grading and invasiveness potential of these tumors. Transgenic expression of an inactive PTPD1 mutant or genetic knockdown of the endogenous PTPD1 severely inhibited both growth and motility of human bladder cancer cells. These findings identify PTPD1 as a novel component of the endocytic machinery that impacts on EGF receptor stability and on growth and motility of bladder cancer cells.
- Published
- 2010
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