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Best Female Scientists
2025

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Best Female Scientists

D-Index
144
Citations
89728
World Ranking
188
National Ranking
116

Medicine

D-Index
147
Citations
92302
World Ranking
1269
National Ranking
737

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2025 - Research.com Best Female Scientists Award

Overview

Ann Marie Schmidt is affiliated with New York University in the United States. Their research spans Medicine and Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, with specific focus on Clinical Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Physiology, Immunology, and Epidemiology. The researcher's work primarily addresses topics related to Advanced Glycation End Products research, Adipose Tissue and Metabolism, Diabetes and associated disorders, Adipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases, Atherosclerosis and Cardiovascular Diseases, Diet and metabolism studies, and COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies.

Frequent publication venues for this scientist include:

  • Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology
  • Circulation Research
  • Circulation
  • Communications Biology
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Recent papers authored or co-authored by Ann Marie Schmidt include:

  • Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products (RAGE) and Mechanisms and Therapeutic Opportunities in Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease: Insights From Human Subjects and Animal Models, 2020, Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
  • Microbial signatures in the lower airways of mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients associated with poor clinical outcome, 2021, Nature Microbiology
  • Aldose Reductase: An Emerging Target for Development of Interventions for Diabetic Cardiovascular Complications, 2021, Frontiers in Endocrinology
  • S100A9-RAGE Axis Accelerates Formation of Macrophage-Mediated Extracellular Vesicle Microcalcification in Diabetes Mellitus, 2020, Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology
  • Small-molecule antagonism of the interaction of the RAGE cytoplasmic domain with DIAPH1 reduces diabetic complications in mice, 2021, Science Translational Medicine

The scientist has collaborated frequently with a number of co-authors, notably:

  • Ravichandran Ramasamy
  • Alexander Shekhtman
  • Lakshmi Arivazhagan
  • Huilin Li
  • Gautham Yepuri

Ann Marie Schmidt's contributions span significant research areas in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, with attention to molecular mechanisms involving advanced glycation end products and diabetic complications. Their work integrates clinical and molecular biochemistry approaches, contributing to understanding inflammatory processes and metabolic disease pathways.

Best Publications

  • Endothelial Cells in Physiology and in the Pathophysiology of Vascular Disorders

    Douglas B. Cines;Eleanor S. Pollak;Clayton A. Buck;Joseph Loscalzo

  • RAGE and amyloid-β peptide neurotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease

    Shi Du Yan;Xi Chen;Jin Fu;Ming Chen

  • Advanced glycation end products: sparking the development of diabetic vascular injury.

    Alison Goldin;Joshua A. Beckman;Ann Marie Schmidt;Mark A. Creager

  • RAGE mediates a novel proinflammatory axis: a central cell surface receptor for S100/calgranulin polypeptides.

    Marion A Hofmann;Steven Drury;Caifeng Fu;Wu Qu

  • Enhanced cellular oxidant stress by the interaction of advanced glycation end products with their receptors/binding proteins.

    Shi Du Yan;A. M. Schmidt;G. M. Anderson;Jinghua Zhang

  • Cloning and expression of a cell surface receptor for advanced glycosylation end products of proteins.

    M. Neeper;A. M. Schmidt;J. Brett;Shi Du Yan

  • RAGE mediates amyloid-beta peptide transport across the blood-brain barrier and accumulation in brain.

    Rashid Deane;Shi Du Yan;Ram Kumar Submamaryan;Barbara LaRue

  • The Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products (RAGE) Is a Cellular Binding Site for Amphoterin MEDIATION OF NEURITE OUTGROWTH AND CO-EXPRESSION OF RAGE AND AMPHOTERIN IN THE DEVELOPING NERVOUS SYSTEM

    Osamu Hori;Jerold Brett;Timothy Slattery;Rong Cao

  • The multiligand receptor RAGE as a progression factor amplifying immune and inflammatory responses

    Ann Marie Schmidt;Shirley ShiDu Yan;Shi Fang Yan;David M. Stern

  • Blockade of RAGE–amphoterin signalling suppresses tumour growth and metastases

    Taguchi A;Blood Dc;del Toro G;Canet A

  • Activation of NADPH oxidase by AGE links oxidant stress to altered gene expression via RAGE.

    Marie-Paule Wautier;Olivier Chappey;Stefano Corda;David M. Stern

  • Suppression of accelerated diabetic atherosclerosis by the soluble receptor for advanced glycation endproducts.

    Lisa Park;Kathleen G. Raman;Kenneth J. Lee;Yan Lu

  • Advanced glycation endproducts interacting with their endothelial receptor induce expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) in cultured human endothelial cells and in mice. A potential mechanism for the accelerated vasculopathy of diabetes.

    Ann Marie Schmidt;Osamu Hori;Jing Xian Chen;Jian Feng Li

  • Advanced glycation end products and vascular inflammation: implications for accelerated atherosclerosis in diabetes.

    Giuseppina Basta;Ann Marie Schmidt;Raffaele De Caterina

  • Diabetes-Associated Sustained Activation of the Transcription Factor Nuclear Factor-κB

    Angelika Bierhaus;Stephan Schiekofer;Stephan Schiekofer;Markus Schwaninger;Martin Andrassy;Martin Andrassy

  • N ε-(Carboxymethyl)Lysine Adducts of Proteins Are Ligands for Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products That Activate Cell Signaling Pathways and Modulate Gene Expression

    Thomas Kislinger;Caifeng Fu;Birgit Huber;Wu Qu

  • Advanced glycation end products and RAGE: a common thread in aging, diabetes, neurodegeneration, and inflammation

    Ravichandran Ramasamy;Susan J. Vannucci;Shirley Shi Du Yan;Kevan Herold

  • The biology of the receptor for advanced glycation end products and its ligands.

    Ann Marie Schmidt;Shi Du Yan;Shi Fang Yan;David M. Stern

  • Survey of the Distribution of a Newly Characterized Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products in Tissues

    Jerold Brett;Ann Marie Schmidt;Shi Du Yan;Yu Shan Zou

  • The Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products (RAGE) Is a Cellular Binding Site for Amphoterin

    Osamu Hori;Jerold Brett;Timothy Slattery;Rong Cao

Frequent Co-Authors

Ravichandran Ramasamy
Ravichandran Ramasamy New York University
Shi Fang Yan
Shi Fang Yan Columbia University
David M. Stern
David M. Stern University of Tennessee Health Science Center
Shi Du Yan
Shi Du Yan Columbia University
Vivette D. D'Agati
Vivette D. D'Agati Columbia University
Bernhard Moser
Bernhard Moser Cardiff University
Kevan C. Herold
Kevan C. Herold Yale University
Huilin Li
Huilin Li Van Andel Institute
Peter P. Nawroth
Peter P. Nawroth Heidelberg University
Daniel P. Raleigh
Daniel P. Raleigh Stony Brook University

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