Search

Your search keyword '"Catherine Robbe Masselot"' showing total 64 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Catherine Robbe Masselot" Remove constraint Author: "Catherine Robbe Masselot"
64 results on '"Catherine Robbe Masselot"'

Search Results

1. Induction of intercrypt goblet cells upon bacterial infection: a promising therapeutic target to restore the mucosal barrier

2. Sialic acid mediated mechanical activation of β2 adrenergic receptors by bacterial pili

3. Food-grade TiO2 is trapped by intestinal mucus in vitro but does not impair mucin O-glycosylation and short-chain fatty acid synthesis in vivo: implications for gut barrier protection

4. Human Fecal Mucin Glycosylation as a New Biomarker in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

5. Airway Mucus Restricts Neisseria meningitidis Away from Nasopharyngeal Epithelial Cells and Protects the Mucosa from Inflammation

6. The oncogenic role ofStreptococcus gallolyticus subsp.gallolyticusis linked to activation of multiple cancer-related signaling pathways

7. Characterization of Mucus-Related Properties of Streptococcus thermophilus: From Adhesion to Induction

8. Fate, uptake and gut toxicity of two colloidal silver products in mice: how micro X-ray fluorescence, micro X-ray absorption spectroscopy and near-infrared spectroscopy provide new insights in food nanotoxicology

9. Global proteomic identifies multiple cancer-related signaling pathways altered by a gut pathobiont associated with colorectal cancer.

10. A Sensitive and Rapid Method to Determine the Adhesion Capacity of Probiotics and Pathogenic Microorganisms to Human Gastrointestinal Mucins

12. Spatial Localization and Binding of the Probiotic Lactobacillus farciminis to the Rat Intestinal Mucosa: Influence of Chronic Stress.

13. Evidence of early increased sialylation of airway mucins and defective mucociliary clearance in CFTR-deficient piglets

14. Zinc Deficiency Disturbs Mucin Expression, O-Glycosylation and Secretion by Intestinal Goblet Cells

15. The expression and functional analysis of the sialyl-T antigen in prostate cancer

16. Receptor recognition by meningococcal type IV pili relies on a specific complex

17. Receptor recognition by meningococcal type IV pili relies on a specific complex N-glycan

18. Airway Mucus Restricts Neisseria meningitidis Away from Nasopharyngeal Epithelial Cells and Protects the Mucosa from Inflammation

19. Mucin CYS domain stiffens the mucus gel hindering bacteria and spermatozoa

20. Air-interfaced colonization model suggests a commensal-like interaction of Neisseria meningitidis with the epithelium, which benefit from colonization by Streptococcus mitis

21. The Pil3 pilus ofStreptococcus gallolyticusbinds to intestinal mucins and to fibrinogen

22. Characterization of Mucus-Related Properties of Streptococcus thermophilus:From Adhesion to Induction

23. Food-grade TiO2 is trapped by intestinal mucus in vitro but does not impair mucin O-glycosylation and short-chain fatty acid synthesis in vivo:implications for gut barrier protection

24. Food-grade TiO

25. Binding of

26. Streptococcus gallolyticusPil3 Pilus Is Required for Adhesion to Colonic Mucus and for Colonization of Mouse Distal Colon

27. Alteration or adaptation, the two roads for human gastric mucin glycosylation infected by Helicobacter pylori

28. How do they stick together? Bacterial adhesins implicated in the binding of bacteria to the human gastrointestinal mucins

29. Targeted epithelial disruption impacts colonic mucus and microbiota in mice

30. Early detection of colonic dysplasia by magnetic resonance molecular imaging with a contrast agent raised against the colon cancer marker MUC5AC: MRI Contrast Agent Targeting MUC5AC

31. Concentration of osmoregulated periplasmic glucans (OPGs) modulates the activation level of the RcsCD RcsB phosphorelay in the phytopathogen bacteriaDickeya dadantii

32. Almost all human gastric mucin O-glycans harbor blood group A, B or H antigens and are potential binding sites for Helicobacter pylori

33. Binding of Helicobacter pylori to Human Gastric Mucins Correlates with Binding of TFF1

34. 136 - Impact of Epithelial Barrier Disruption on Mucus Layer and GUT Microbiota in Mice

35. Expression of a Core 3 Disialyl-Lex Hexasaccharide in Human Colorectal Cancers: A Potential Marker of Malignant Transformation in Colon

36. O-Glycan inhibitors generate aryl-glycans, induce apoptosis and lead to growth inhibition in colorectal cancer cell lines

37. Muc5ac gastric mucin glycosylation is shaped by FUT2 activity and functionally impacts Helicobacter pylori binding

38. Early detection of colonic dysplasia by magnetic resonance molecular imaging with a contrast agent raised against the colon cancer marker MUC5AC

39. Spatial localization and binding of the probiotic Lactobacillus farciminis to the rat intestinal mucosa: influence of chronic stress

40. Stress disrupts the intestinal mucus barrier in rats via mucin O-glycosylation shift: prevention by probiotic treatment

41. Delivery of a mucin domain enriched in cysteine residues strengthens the intestinal mucous barrier

42. Chapter 27. Epithelial mucins and bacterial adhesion

43. Stress disrupts intestinal mucus barrier in rats via mucin O-glycosylation shift: prevention by a probiotic treatment

44. Virulent Shigella flexneri Affects Secretion, Expression, and Glycosylation of Gel-Forming Mucins in Mucus-Producing Cells

45. Local drug delivery strategy for cancer treatment: use of biocompatible sol-gel-derived porous materials

46. Biosynthesis of Osmoregulated Periplasmic Glucans in Escherichia coli : The Phosphoethanolamine Transferase Is Encoded by opgE

47. Deleted in malignant brain tumor 1 is secreted in the oviduct and involved in the mechanism of fertilization in equine and porcine species

48. Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii influence the production of mucus glycans and the development of goblet cells in the colonic epithelium of a gnotobiotic model rodent

49. Carbohydrate utilization by enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 in bovine intestinal content

50. Concentration of osmoregulated periplasmic glucans (OPGs) modulates the activation level of the RcsCD RcsB phosphorelay in the phytopathogen bacteria Dickeya dadantii

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources