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Neuroprotection: Heat Shock Proteins

Current Medical Research and Opinion, 2002
Cells respond to external stresses such as metabolic disturbances and injuries, including cerebral ischaemia (stroke), in a very typical manner. The cell mounts a stress response that incorporates the induction of a number of genes encoding proteins which may act to save the cell from death.
Kelly, S, Yenari, MA
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Parasite heat-shock proteins

Parasitology Today, 1988
Many parasites, including most of those of medical or veterinary importance, experience a major increase in ambient temperature at some stage during their life cycle. This occurs when a cyst or free-living larval form is ingested by a warm-blooded host, when a poikilotherm-infecting parasite is transmitted to a homeotherm, or when a transiently free ...
G, Newport, J, Culpepper, N, Agabian
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Heat shock protein 90

Current Opinion in Oncology, 2003
Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) is a molecular chaperone required for the stability and function of a number of conditionally activated and/or expressed signaling proteins, as well as multiple mutated, chimeric, or overexpressed signaling proteins, which promote cancer cell growth or survival or both.
Len, Neckers, S Percy, Ivy
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Heat Shock Proteins

1990
The finding that tumor cells are more thermosensitive than their normal counterparts (1–4) prompted research on the effect of heat on normal and neoplastic cells. In 1970, the phenomenon of thermotolerance was described for the first time (5). Cells of L12l0 leukemia after being exposed to sublethal hyperthermia (52% of BDF1 mice survivors after ...
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HEAT SHOCK PROTEINS, ANTI-HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN REACTIVITY AND ALLOGRAFT REJECTION

Transplantation, 2001
Heat shock proteins are families of highly conserved immunodominant molecules, reactivity to which has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a number of autoimmune and vascular disease states. However, heat shock proteins are cytoprotective, and in clinical and experimental arthritis, anti-heat shock protein reactivity can down modulate immune ...
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Heat Shock Proteins

2009
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) or so called stress proteins have multifunctional roles and are involved in many physiological processes, such as cell cycle control, cell proliferation, development, organisation of the cytoarchitecture, regulation of cell death and survival, and play regulatory roles in cellular aging and longevity.
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Heat-shock protein protection

Trends in Neurosciences, 1999
F R, Sharp, S M, Massa, R A, Swanson
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[Heat shock proteins].

Bulletin de la Societe des sciences medicales du Grand-Duche de Luxembourg, 1993
All cells, procaryotic and eucaryotic, respond to a rise in environmental temperature by a rapid synthesis of a set of specific proteins: the heat shock proteins (HSPs). These HSPs appear to be among the most conserved proteins in nature and certain members of the HSP family are present in non-stressed cells.
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The contemporary management of cancers of the sinonasal tract in adults

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2023
Rajat Thawani
exaly  

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