28 results match your criteria: "University Texas Southwestern Medical Center[Affiliation]"
DNA Cell Biol
July 1999
Center for Biomedical Inventions, Department of Internal Medicine, The University Texas-Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75235-8573, USA.
The development of an effective HIV vaccine is both a pressing and a formidable problem. The most encouraging results to date have been achieved using live-attenuated immunodeficiency viruses. However, the frequency of pathogenic breakthroughs has been a deterrent to their development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Biotechnol
April 1999
Department of Internal Medicine, University Texas-Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75235-8573, USA.
The increasing accumulation of genomic sequence information has accentuated the need for new methods to efficiently assess gene function and to prepare reagents to study these functions. Toward solving this general problem in functional genomics, we report a method by which any PCR-amplified open-reading frame (ORF) can be noncovalently linked to a eukaryotic promoter and terminator, and directly injected into animals to produce local gene expression. We also demonstrate that ORFs can be delivered into mice to produce antibodies specific for the encoded foreign protein by simply attaching mammalian promoter and terminator sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchweiz Med Wochenschr
May 1996
Dallas VA Medical Center, University Texas Southwestern Medical Center 75216, USA.
Gastrointestinal cancers are among the leading sites of cancer and leading causes of cancer-related deaths. Gastrointestinal cancers are often at an advanced stage at the time of diagnosis, and are highly resistant to non-surgical therapy. Thus early diagnosis and prevention are approaches that are under active investigation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF