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Medicine

D-Index
93
Citations
26410
World Ranking
11012
National Ranking
1042

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2004 - Fellow of the Royal Society, United Kingdom
  • 1995 - Member of Academia Europaea
  • Fellow of The Academy of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom
  • Fellow of The Academy of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom

Overview

Graham J. Dockray is affiliated with the University of Liverpool in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily spans the fields of Medicine and Neuroscience, with subfields including Surgery, Gastroenterology, Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, and Psychiatry and Mental Health.

The main topics of their work encompass Helicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies, gastroesophageal reflux and treatments, gastric cancer management and outcomes, neuropeptides and animal physiology, cancer, stress, anesthesia and immune response, as well as infant nutrition and health, and regulation of appetite and obesity.

Recent publications authored or co-authored by Graham J. Dockray include the following papers:

  • Effects of Proton Pump Inhibitor Therapy, H. pylori Infection and Gastric Preneoplastic Pathology on Fasting Serum Gastrin Concentrations (2021), published in Frontiers in Endocrinology
  • Elevated Serum Gastrin Is Associated with Melanoma Progression: Putative Role in Increased Migration and Invasion of Melanoma Cells (2023), published in International Journal of Molecular Sciences
  • Introduction to special issue on feeding peptides (2021), published in Peptides

Their work has been published recurrently in journals such as Frontiers in Endocrinology, International Journal of Molecular Sciences, and Peptides.

Frequent collaborators of Graham J. Dockray include László Tiszlavicz, Andrea Varró, Reuben Veysey-Smith, Andrew R. Moore, and Senthil V. Murugesan.

Throughout their career, Graham J. Dockray has received several recognitions, including being named a Fellow of the Royal Society in the United Kingdom in 2004, a Member of Academia Europaea in 1995, and a Fellow of The Academy of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom.

Best Publications

  • Immunochemical evidence of cholecystokinin-like peptides in brain

    Dockray Gj

  • Synergistic interaction between hypergastrinemia and Helicobacter infection in a mouse model of gastric cancer.

    Timothy C. Wang;Charles A. Dangler;Duan Chen;James R. Goldenring

  • Isolation, structure and biological activity of two cholecystokinin octapeptides from sheep brain

    Dockray Gj;Gregory Ra;Hutchison Jb;Harris Ji

  • The neuronal origin of bombesin-like immunoreactivity in the rat gastrointestinal tract.

    G.J. Dockray;C. Vaillant;J.H. Walsh

  • Gut Peptides: Biochemistry and Physiology

    John H. Walsh;Graham J. Dockray;Roger D. Mitty

  • Characterization of the peptidergic afferent innervation of the stomach in the rat, mouse and guinea-pig

    T. Grhkn;G J. Dockray

  • The gastrins: their production and biological activities.

    G J Dockray;A Varro;R Dimaline;T Wang

  • Small-intestinal dysfunction accompanies the complex endocrinopathy of human proprotein convertase 1 deficiency

    Robert S Jackson;John W M Creemers;I Sadaf Farooqi;Marie-Laure Raffin-Sanson

  • A novel active pentapeptide from chicken brain identified by antibodies to FMRFamide.

    G. J. Dockray;J. R. Reeve;J. Shively;R. J. Gayton

  • Expression of Cannabinoid CB1 Receptors by Vagal Afferent Neurons Is Inhibited by Cholecystokinin

    Galina Burdyga;Simon Lal;Andrea Varro;Rod Dimaline

  • Fatty acid chain length determines cholecystokinin secretion and effect on human gastric motility

    John McLaughlin;Maria Grazia Lucà;Malcolm N. Jones;Massimo D'Amato

  • Cholecystokinins in rat cerebral cortex: Identification, purification and characterization by immunochemical methods

    Graham J. Dockray

  • Processing and proliferative effects of human progastrin in transgenic mice.

    T C Wang;T J Koh;A Varro;R J Cahill

  • Sensory substance P innervation of the stomach and pancreas: Demonstration of capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons in the rat by combined immunohistochemistry and retrograde tracing

    K.A. Sharkey;R.G. Williams;G.J. Dockray

  • The hypothalamic arcuate nucleus-median eminence complex: immunohistochemistry of transmitters, peptides and DARPP-32 with special reference to coexistence in dopamine neurons.

    Barry J. Everitt;Björn Meister;Tomas Hökfelt;Tor Melander

  • Neurochemical activities in human temporal lobe related to aging and Alzheimer-type changes

    E.K. Perry;G. Blessed;B.E. Tomlinson;R.H. Perry

  • Gastrin is a target of the β-catenin/TCF-4 growth-signaling pathway in a model of intestinal polyposis

    Theodore J. Koh;Clemens J. Bulitta;John V. Fleming;Graham J. Dockray

  • Origin of peptide-containing fibers in the inferior mesenteric ganglion of the guinea-pig: Immunohistochemical studies with antisera to substance P, enkephalin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, cholecystokinin and bombesin

    C.-J. Dalsgaard;C.-J. Dalsgaard;C.-J. Dalsgaard;T. Hökfelt;T. Hökfelt;T. Hökfelt;M. Schultzberg;M. Schultzberg;M. Schultzberg;J.M. Lundberg;J.M. Lundberg;J.M. Lundberg

  • The expanding family of -RFamide peptides and their effects on feeding behaviour.

    Graham J. Dockray

  • Ghrelin receptors in rat and human nodose ganglia: putative role in regulating CB-1 and MCH receptor abundance

    Galina Burdyga;Andrea Varro;Rod Dimaline;David G. Thompson

Frequent Co-Authors

Timothy C. Wang
Timothy C. Wang Columbia University
David G. Thompson
David G. Thompson University of Manchester
András Varró
András Varró University of Szeged
Tomas Hökfelt
Tomas Hökfelt Karolinska Institute
Helen E. Raybould
Helen E. Raybould University of California, Davis
Jens F. Rehfeld
Jens F. Rehfeld University of Copenhagen
Marianne Schultzberg
Marianne Schultzberg Karolinska Institute
Robert J. Beynon
Robert J. Beynon University of Liverpool
Lars Terenius
Lars Terenius Karolinska Institute

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