54 results match your criteria: "Ohio State University School of Medicine and Public Health[Affiliation]"
Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the oral cavity is a multistep process, progressing through a series of discrete, irreversible and complementary alterations in genes that control cell growth, death, and differentiation. In the premalignant state, the oral mucosa progresses through various grades of epithelial dysplasia, with the potential to convert to SCC. Chemopreventive strategies are designed to suppress, reverse, or prevent the formation of premalignant lesions and their subsequent progression to SCC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Nephrol Hypertens
May 2000
Department of Medicine, Ohio State University School of Medicine and Public Health, Columbus, USA.
Chemokines have been verified as inflammatory mediators of experimental nephritis by using anti-chemokine antibodies, chemokine receptor antagonists or targeted chemokine gene disruption. In human disease, chemokines are expressed in the kidney in association with inflammatory infiltrates. Chemokine blockade is thus a potentially novel approach to therapy of inflammatory renal disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObstet Gynecol
June 2000
The Ohio State University School of Medicine and Public Health, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun
June 1999
Department of Medicine, Ohio State University School of Medicine and Public Health, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.
Two novel polymorphisms in the distal regulatory region of the MCP-1 gene were identified by directly sequencing PCR amplified genomic DNA. These polymorphisms are located at positions -2518 (G or A) and -2076 (A or T) relative to the major transcriptional start site of the gene. To examine the effect of these polymorphisms on MCP-1 transcription, polymorphic variants of the MCP-1 distal regulatory region were placed upstream of a luciferase reporter gene and transfected into A172 cells.
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