World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Immunology

D-Index
57
Citations
14742
World Ranking
3590
National Ranking
1663

Overview

Daniel P. Stites is affiliated with the University of California, San Francisco in the United States. This association situates them within a prominent research institution known for its contributions to health sciences and biomedical research.

There are no listed recent papers, frequent co-authors, publication venues, book publications, main or subfields of study, main topics of work, or awards associated with Daniel P. Stites in the available data. Consequently, information about specific research activities, collaborations, or areas of academic focus is not provided.

Despite the lack of detailed bibliometric or topical data, the professional affiliation with a leading university indicates engagement with academic research and potential involvement in advanced scientific studies or medical disciplines.

The absence of published works and awards in the source data suggests that publicly accessible bibliographic records or recognitions for this individual have not been documented or are not available at this time.

Best Publications

  • BASIC and clinical immunology

    Daniel P. Stites;Abba I. Terr

  • CD8+ lymphocytes can control HIV infection in vitro by suppressing virus replication

    Christopher M. Walker;Dewey J. Moody;Daniel P. Stites;Jay A. Levy

  • Seropositivity for HIV and the development of AIDS or AIDS related condition: three year follow up of the San Francisco General Hospital cohort.

    Andrew R. Moss;Peter Bacchetti;Dennis Osmond;Walter Krampf

  • Progesterone and Maintenance of Pregnancy: is Progesterone Nature's Immunosuppressant?

    Pentti K. Siiteri;Freddy Febres;L. E. Clemens;R. Jeffrey Chang

  • Human immunodeficiency virus can productively infect cultured human glial cells.

    Cecilia Cheng-Mayer;James T. Rutka;Mark L. Rosenblum;Thomas McHugh

  • Antibodies to a scrapie prion protein

    Paul E. Bendheim;Ronald A. Barry;Stephen J. DeArmond;Daniel P. Stites

  • AIDS-associated retroviruses (ARV) can productively infect other cells besides human T helper cells.

    J A Levy;J Shimabukuro;T McHugh;C Casavant

  • Mechanism of immunosuppression of progesterone on maternal lymphocyte activation during pregnancy.

    Louis E. Clemens;Pentti K. Siiteri;Daniel P. Stites

  • An AIDS-related cytotoxic autoantibody reacts with a specific antigen on stimulated CD4+ T cells.

    Raphael B. Stricker;Thomas M. McHugh;Dewey J. Moody;W. J. W. Morrow

  • Persistence of human papillomavirus type 16 infection is associated with lack of cytotoxic T lymphocyte response to the E6 antigens.

    Mayumi Nakagawa;Daniel P. Stites;Sandeep Patel;Sepideh Farhat

  • Immunologic and endocrine interrelationships in pregnancy.

    Pentti K. Siiteri;Daniel P. Stites

  • Cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses to E6 and E7 proteins of human papillomavirus type 16: relationship to cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.

    Mayumi Nakagawa;Daniel P. Stites;Sepideh Farhat;Jerry R. Sisler

  • Differential ability of human immunodeficiency virus isolates to productively infect human cells.

    L A Evans;T M McHugh;D P Stites;J A Levy

  • Exogenous immunoglobulin and the macrophage origin of Reed-Sternberg cells in Hodgkin's disease.

    Marshall E. Kadin;Daniel P. Stites;Ronald Levy;Roger Warnke

  • The Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome: RESULTS OF TRANSFER FACTOR THERAPY

    L E Spitler;A S Levin;D P Stites;H H Fudenberg

  • Immunosuppressive activity of human seminal plasma. I. Inhibition of in vitro lymphocyte activation.

    Edith M. Lord;George F. Sensabaugh;Daniel P. Stites

  • Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome, A Genetically Determined Cellular Immunologic Deficiency: Clinical and Laboratory Responses to Therapy with Transfer Factor

    A. S. Levin;L. E. Spitler;D. P. Stites;H. H. Fudenberg

  • Stress reduction training changed number of sexual partners but not immune function in men with HIV.

    T J Coates;L McKusick;R Kuno;D P Stites

  • Hypothesis: AIDS is an autoimmune disease directed at the immune system and triggered by a lymphotropic retrovirus.

    John L. Ziegler;John L. Ziegler;Daniel P. Stites

  • Bacillary angiomatosis and bacillary splenitis in immunocompetent adults

    Jordan W. Tappero;Jane E. Koehler;Timothy G. Berger;Clay J. Cockerell

  • Effects of Psychosocial Treatment in Prolonging Cancer Survival May Be Mediated by Neuroimmune Pathways

    David Spiegel;Sandra E. Sephton;Abba I. Terr;Daniel P. Stites

  • Th1 cytokine patterns in cervical human papillomavirus infection.

    Mark Scott;Daniel P. Stites;Anna-Barbara Moscicki

Frequent Co-Authors

H. Hugh Fudenberg
H. Hugh Fudenberg University of California, San Francisco
Jay A. Levy
Jay A. Levy University of California, San Francisco
Stanley B. Prusiner
Stanley B. Prusiner University of California, San Francisco
Anna-Barbara Moscicki
Anna-Barbara Moscicki University of California, Los Angeles
Michael P. Busch
Michael P. Busch University of California, San Francisco
Joel M. Palefsky
Joel M. Palefsky University of California, San Francisco
Sandra E. Sephton
Sandra E. Sephton University of Louisville
David Spiegel
David Spiegel Stanford University
Yuval Shahar
Yuval Shahar Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Peter Bacchetti
Peter Bacchetti University of California, San Francisco

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Related Online Degrees & Career Pathways

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Best Scientists Citing Daniel P. Stites