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1. Metallomic profile in non-cirrhotic hepatocellular carcinoma supports a phenomenon of metal metabolism adaptation in tumor cells.

2. Intermittent reloading does not prevent reduction in iron availability and hepcidin upregulation caused by hindlimb unloading.

3. Simulated microgravity disturbs iron metabolism and distribution in humans: Lessons from dry immersion, an innovative ground-based human model.

4. Ceruloplasmin deficiency does not induce macrophagic iron overload: lessons from a new rat model of hereditary aceruloplasminemia.

5. Spleen iron, molybdenum, and manganese concentrations are coregulated in hepcidin-deficient and secondary iron overload models in mice.

6. Iron excess upregulates SPNS2 mRNA levels but reduces sphingosine-1-phosphate export in human osteoblastic MG-63 cells.

7. Mouse genetic background impacts both on iron and non-iron metals parameters and on their relationships.

8. Testosterone perturbs systemic iron balance through activation of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling in the liver and repression of hepcidin.

9. Ferroportin diseases: functional studies, a link between genetic and clinical phenotype.

10. Iron excess limits HHIPL-2 gene expression and decreases osteoblastic activity in human MG-63 cells.

11. A novel N491S mutation in the human SLC11A2 gene impairs protein trafficking and in association with the G212V mutation leads to microcytic anemia and liver iron overload.

12. GATA-4 transcription factor regulates hepatic hepcidin expression.

13. [Hereditary iron overload].

14. Molecular diagnosis of genetic iron-overload disorders.

15. Natural and synthetic STAT3 inhibitors reduce hepcidin expression in differentiated mouse hepatocytes expressing the active phosphorylated STAT3 form.

16. A new mutation in the hepcidin promoter impairs its BMP response and contributes to a severe phenotype in HFE related hemochromatosis.

17. Purification of neuronal inclusions of patients with Huntington's disease reveals a broad range of N-terminal fragments of expanded huntingtin and insoluble polymers.

18. The POU transcription factor Oct-1 represses virus-induced interferon A gene expression.

19. Positive and negative control of virus-induced interferon-A gene expression.

20. Repression by homeoprotein pitx1 of virus-induced interferon a promoters is mediated by physical interaction and trans repression of IRF3 and IRF7.

21. Regulation of virus-induced interferon-A genes.

22. Repression of virus-induced interferon A promoters by homeodomain transcription factor Ptx1.

23. Silencer activity in the interferon-A gene promoters.

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