Search
Skip to Search Results- 6Gänzle, Michael G.
- 5Willing, Benjamin P.
- 3Dieleman, Levinus A.
- 3Field, Catherine J.
- 3Finlay, B. Brett
- 3Sawyer, Michael B.
- 21Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 21Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 16Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science, Department of
- 16Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science, Department of/Journal Articles (Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science)
- 2Chemistry, Department of
- 2Chemistry, Department of/Journal Articles (Chemistry)
- 4Department of Agricultural, Food, and Nutritional Science
- 3Department of Biochemistry
- 3Faculty of Nursing
- 2Department of Chemistry
- 2Department of Psychiatry
- 2Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
- 1Baracos, Vickie (Oncology, Agricultural, Food, and Nutritional Science)
- 1Brindley, David N. (University of Alberta, Biochemistry)
- 1Coupland, Nicholas (Psychiatry)
- 1Dr Vera Mazurak, Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science
- 1Dr. Afsaneh Lavasanifar (Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences)
- 1Dr. Andrew Belch (Department of Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry)
-
Commensal bacteria and expression of two major intestinal chemokines, TECK/CCL25 and MEC/CCL28, and their receptors
Download2007
Gerdts, Volker, Meurens, Francois, Willing, Benjamin P., Berri, Mustapha, Siggers, Richard H., Van Kessel, Andrew G., Salmon, Henri
Background CCL25/TECK and CCL28/MEC are CC chemokines primarily expressed in thymic dendritic cells and mucosal epithelial cells. Their receptors, CCR9 and CCR10, are mainly expressed on T and B lymphocytes. In human, mouse, pig and sheep CCL25 and CCL28 play an important role in the segregation...
-
Single and combined supplementation of glutamine and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids on host tolerance and tumour response to 7-ethyl-10-[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino]carbonyloxy-camptothecin (CPT-11)/5-fluorouracil chemotherapy in rats bearing Ward colon tumour
Download2009
Xue, Hongyu, Sawyer, Michael B., Le Roy, Severine, Dieleman, Levinus A., Baracos, Vickie E., Field, Catherine J.
Prior reports suggest that during irinotecan (7-ethyl-10-[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino]carbonyloxy-camptothecin; CPT-11) chemotherapy in laboratory rats, the anti-tumour efficacy and diarrhoea toxicity could be modulated by n-3 PUFA and glutamine, respectively. We further examined how these two...
-
Fall 2009
In rodents, stress and corticosteroids rapidly increase excitatory neurotransmission. During excitatory neurotransmission, glutamate concentrations are maintained by conversion of glutamine to glutamate. The hypothesis was that cortisol would alter human prefrontal glutamine or glutamate...
-
Lipid Modified Polymers for Transfection of Human CRL Fibroblasts, and for siRNA Mediated MDR Reversal in Melanoma Cancer Therapy
DownloadFall 2010
Gene delivery for therapeutic purposes is quickly emerging as the best potential treatment option for inherited genetic diseases and cancer. Viral gene carriers have been the choice for this purpose due to their high efficiency, but harmful immunogenic and oncogenic host reactions have limited...
-
Fall 2010
Escalating cancer rates and an increase in the complexity and duration of chemotherapy regimens have brought the issue of cancer treatment at home to the forefront. For the participants of this study, home chemotherapy was offered as a potential treatment choice. Ten patients who accepted were...
-
The intestinal microbiota plays a role in Salmonella-induced colitis independent of pathogen colonization
Download2011
Antunes, L. Caetano M., Gill, Navkiran, Russell, Shannon L., Finlay, B. Brett, Ferreira, Rosana B., Croxen, Matthew A., Willing, Benjamin P.
The intestinal microbiota is composed of hundreds of species of bacteria, fungi and protozoa and is critical for numerous biological processes, such as nutrient acquisition, vitamin production, and colonization resistance against bacterial pathogens. We studied the role of the intestinal...
-
2011
Dingle, Tanis C., Szpacenko, Adam, Ng, Kenneth K.S., Kitov, Pavel, Klassen, John S., El-Hawiet, Amr, Kitova,Elena N., Mulvey, George L., Eugenio, Luiz, Armstrong, Glen D.
The binding of recombinant fragments of the C-terminal cell-binding domains of the two large exotoxins, toxin A (TcdA) and toxin B (TcdB), expressed by Clostridium difficile and a library consisting of the most abundant neutral and acidic human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) was examined...
-
2011
El-Hawiet, Amr, Klassen, John S., Armstrong, Glen D., Dingle, Tanis C., Eugenio, Luiz, Mulvey, George L., Szpacenko, Adam, Ng, Kenneth K.S., Kitova,Elena N., Kitov, Pavel
The binding of recombinant fragments of the C-terminal cell-binding domains of the two large exotoxins, toxin A (TcdA) and toxin B (TcdB), expressed by Clostridium difficile and a library consisting of the most abundant neutral and acidic human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) was examined...