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Immunology

D-Index
51
Citations
12630
World Ranking
4124
National Ranking
1880

Overview

Beth D. Jamieson is affiliated with the University of California, Los Angeles in the United States. Their research primarily focuses on the intersection of medicine and immunology, with a significant emphasis on virology and infectious diseases.

The main fields of study associated with Jamieson's work include:

  • Medicine
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Their subfields of study span:

  • Virology
  • Emergency Medicine
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Epidemiology
  • Molecular Biology

Key topics in Jamieson's research cover various aspects of HIV and related health complications. These include:

  • HIV Research and Treatment
  • HIV-related health complications and treatments
  • HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions
  • Epigenetics and DNA Methylation
  • Immune Cell Function and Interaction
  • Autophagy in Disease and Therapy
  • Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research

Jamieson has contributed to multiple publications, with recent papers including:

  • Accelerated aging with HIV occurs at the time of initial HIV infection, 2022, iScience
  • Pathogenesis of Aging and Age-related Comorbidities in People with HIV: Highlights from the HIV ACTION Workshop, 2020, Pathogens and Immunity
  • The Effects of Anti-retroviral Therapy on Epigenetic Age Acceleration Observed in HIV-1-infected Adults, 2020, Pathogens and Immunity
  • HIV, pathology and epigenetic age acceleration in different human tissues, 2022, GeroScience
  • Autophagy inducer rapamycin treatment reduces IFN-I-mediated Inflammation and improves anti-HIV-1 T cell response in vivo, 2022, JCI Insight

The frequent publication venues for their work are:

  • iScience
  • Pathogens and Immunity
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
  • Nature Communications

Jamieson has collaborated extensively with a number of researchers. Their frequent co-authors include:

  • Steve Horvath
  • Steven M. Wolinsky
  • Roger Shih
  • Otoniel Martínez-Maza
  • Mary E. Sehl

Best Publications

  • Changes in thymic function with age and during the treatment of HIV infection

    Daniel C. Douek;Richard D. McFarland;Phillip H. Keiser;Earl A. Gage

  • Cytotoxic T-cell memory without antigen

    Lisa. L. Lau;Beth D. Jamieson;T. Somasundaram;Rafi Ahmed

  • LXR Signaling Couples Sterol Metabolism to Proliferation in the Acquired Immune Response

    Steven J. Bensinger;Michelle N. Bradley;Sean B. Joseph;Noam Zelcer

  • An epigenetic clock analysis of race/ethnicity, sex, and coronary heart disease

    Steve Horvath;Michael Gurven;Morgan E. Levine;Benjamin C. Trumble

  • Generation of Functional Thymocytes in the Human Adult

    Beth D Jamieson;Daniel C Douek;Scott Killian;Lance E Hultin

  • HIV-1 Infection Is Associated With an Earlier Occurrence of a Phenotype Related to Frailty

    Loic Desquilbet;Lisa P Jacobson;Linda P Fried;John P Phair

  • The SCID-hu mouse as a model for HIV-1 infection

    Grace M. Aldrovandi;Gerold Feuer;Lianying Gao;Beth Jamieson

  • Predictive value of immunologic and virologic markers after long or short duration of HIV-1 infection.

    Janis V. Giorgi;Robert H. Lyles;Jose L. Matud;Traci E. Yamashita

  • Homeostasis of the Naive CD4+ T Cell Compartment during Aging

    Ryan D. Kilpatrick;Tammy Rickabaugh;Lance E. Hultin;Patricia Hultin

  • Requirement of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 nef for in vivo replication and pathogenicity.

    Beth D. Jamieson;Grace M. Aldrovandi;Vicente Planelles;Jeremy B M Jowett

  • Telomerase-Based Pharmacologic Enhancement of Antiviral Function of Human CD8+ T Lymphocytes

    Steven Russell Fauce;Beth D. Jamieson;Allison C. Chin;Ronald T. Mitsuyasu

  • Relationship between a frailty-related phenotype and progressive deterioration of the immune system in HIV-infected men.

    Loic Desquilbet;Joseph B. Margolick;Linda P. Fried;John P. Phair

  • Copy number variation of KIR genes influences HIV-1 control.

    Kimberly Pelak;Anna C. Need;Jacques Fellay;Jacques Fellay;Kevin V. Shianna

  • Premature Aging of T cells Is Associated With Faster HIV-1 Disease Progression

    Weiwei Cao;Beth D Jamieson;Lance E Hultin;Patricia M Hultin

  • Regulatory T cell expansion and immune activation during untreated HIV type 1 infection are associated with disease progression.

    Weiwei Cao;Beth D. Jamieson;Lance E. Hultin;Patricia M. Hultin

  • Cocaine Enhances Human Immunodeficiency Virus Replication in a Model of Severe Combined Immunodeficient Mice Implanted with Human Peripheral Blood Leukocytes

    Michael D. Roth;Donald P. Tashkin;Ruth Choi;Beth D. Jamieson

  • T cell memory. Long-term persistence of virus-specific cytotoxic T cells.

    B D Jamieson;R Ahmed

  • Effects of CCR5-Delta32 and CCR2-64I alleles on HIV-1 disease progression: the protection varies with duration of infection.

    Stephanie A. Mulherin;Stephanie A. Mulherin;Thomas R. O'Brien;John P.A. Ioannidis;John P.A. Ioannidis;James J. Goedert

  • In Vivo Pathogenesis of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Reporter Virus

    Beth D. Jamieson;Jerome A. Zack

  • Emergence and persistence of CXCR4-tropic HIV-1 in a population of men from the multicenter AIDS cohort study.

    James C. Shepherd;Lisa P. Jacobson;Wei Qiao;Beth D. Jamieson

  • cAMP Up-Regulates Cell Surface Expression of Lymphocyte CXCR4: Implications for Chemotaxis and HIV-1 Infection

    Steve W. Cole;Beth D. Jamieson;Jerome A. Zack

Frequent Co-Authors

Otto O. Yang
Otto O. Yang University of California, Los Angeles
Roger Detels
Roger Detels University of California, Los Angeles
Joseph B. Margolick
Joseph B. Margolick Johns Hopkins University
Jerome A. Zack
Jerome A. Zack University of California, Los Angeles
John P. Phair
John P. Phair Northwestern University
Charles R. Rinaldo
Charles R. Rinaldo University of Pittsburgh
Lisa P. Jacobson
Lisa P. Jacobson Johns Hopkins University
Otoniel Martínez-Maza
Otoniel Martínez-Maza University of California, Los Angeles
Janis V. Giorgi
Janis V. Giorgi University of California, Los Angeles
Rafi Ahmed
Rafi Ahmed Emory University

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