Items where Research Group is "Medicine (former - to 2013)

Group by: Creators | Item Type | Status | No Grouping
Jump to: C | H | K | M | S | W
Number of items: 9.

C

Cobbold, C, Windsor, M and Wileman, TE (2001) A virally encoded chaperone specialised for folding of the major capsid protein of African swine fever virus. Journal of Virology, 75 (16). pp. 7221-7229.

H

Heath, Colin M., Windsor, Miriam and Wileman, Thomas (2001) Aggresomes resemble sites specialized for virus assembly. Journal of Cell Biology, 153 (3). pp. 449-456. ISSN 1540-8140

K

Kim, J and Kat, CC (2001) Intraoperative photography. British Journal of Plastic Surgery, 54 (6). pp. 553-4.

M

McCrossan, Mari, Windsor, Miriam, Ponnambalam, Sreenivasan, Armstrong, John and Wileman, Thomas (2001) The trans Golgi network is lost from cells with African swine fever virus. Journal of Virology, 75 (23). pp. 11755-11765.

S

Sexton, DW (2001) Induction of Apoptosis in Eosinophils via co-culture with Airway Epithelium. In: European Academy for Allergology and Clinical Immunology (EAACI), Berlin, Germany, 2001-01-01.

Sexton, DW and Garcia, J (2001) Aveolar epithelial cells recognise and ingest apoptotic eosinophils in an integrin and phosphatidylserine-dependant manner, a process enhanced by dexamethasone. In: European Academy for Allergology and Clinical Immunology (EAACI), Berlin, Germany, 2001-01-01.

Sexton, Darren W., Blaylock, Morgan G. and Walsh, Garry M. (2001) Human alveolar epithelial cells engulf apoptotic eosinophils by means of integrin- and phosphatidylserine receptor-dependent mechanisms: a process upregulated by dexamethasone. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 108 (6). pp. 962-969.

W

Wileman, T (2001) The mechanistic links between A and B. In: The British Society of Methodology, 2002-08-01.

Wileman, Tom (2001) A European Perspective on the coming Global Challenge. In: Annual International Conference of the Global Society of Researchers in Assessment Methodologies, 2001-06-01.

This list was generated on Thu May 9 10:57:51 2024 UTC.