World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
53
Citations
11532
World Ranking
16065
National Ranking
6662

Overview

Henry Hennings is affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. Their professional profile centers on scientific research conducted within this prominent federal agency.

No specific recent papers or research publications are listed for Henry Hennings. There are also no frequent co-authors, which suggests either independent work or collaborations not recorded in the current data.

Likewise, information regarding frequent publication venues or book publications is not available. As a result, the venues and publishers connected to Henry Hennings remain unspecified.

The fields and subfields of study in which Henry Hennings specializes have not been detailed. This absence of data means the precise academic or scientific focus areas related to their research work are not currently documented.

Similarly, the main topics of work explored by Henry Hennings are not provided, and there are no awards reported in the available information. This limits the overview to their institutional association without delving into thematic or disciplinary contributions.

Henry Hennings is identified as currently living, and the profile reflects an ongoing career within the research environment at the National Institutes of Health.

Best Publications

  • Calcium regulation of growth and differentiation of mouse epidermal cells in culture

    Henry Hennings;Delores Michael;Christina Cheng;Peter Steinert

  • Calcium regulation of cell-cell contact and differentiation of epidermal cells in culture. An ultrastructural study.

    Henry Hennings;Karen A. Holbrook

  • Malignant conversion of mouse skin tumours is increased by tumour initiators and unaffected by tumour promoters.

    Henry Hennings;Robert Shores;Martin L. Wenk;Edwin F. Spangler

  • Phorbol esters stimulate DNA synthesis and ornithine decarboxylase activity in mouse epidermal cell cultures

    Stuart H. Yuspa;Ulrike Lichti;Theresa Ben;Elroy Patterson

  • Divergent responses in epidermal basal cells exposed to the tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate.

    Stuart H. Yuspa;Theresa Ben;Henry Hennings;Ulrike Lichti

  • Bryostatin 1, an activator of protein kinase C, inhibits tumor promotion by phorbol esters in SENCAR mouse skin

    Henry Hennings;Peter M. Blumberg;George R. Pettit;Cherry L. Herald

  • Loss of expression of transforming growth factor beta in skin and skin tumors is associated with hyperproliferation and a high risk for malignant conversion

    A B Glick;A B Kulkarni;T Tennenbaum;H Hennings

  • Studies on the mechanism of skin tumor promotion.

    Henry Hennings;R. K. Boutwell

  • FVB/N mice: an inbred strain sensitive to the chemical induction of squamous cell carcinomas in the skin

    Henry Hennings;Adam B. Glick;David T. Lowry;Ljubicka S. Krsmanovic

  • Development of Murine Epidermal Cell Lines Which Contain an Activated rasHa Oncogene and Form Papillomas in Skin Grafts on Athymic Nude Mouse Hosts

    James E. Strickland;David A. Greenhalgh;Aneta Koceva-Chyla;Henry Hennings

  • Phenotypic Expression of Epidermal Cells in Vitro: A Review

    Karen A. Holbrook;Henry Hennings

  • Optimized Conditions for the Growth of Human Epidermal Cells in Culture

    Pamela Hawley-Nelson;James E. Sullivan;Margaret Kung;Henry Hennings

  • Induction of papillomas with a high probability of conversion to malignancy.

    Henry Hennings;Robert Shores;Patricia Mitchell;Edwin F. Spangler

  • Intracellular calcium alterations in response to increased external calcium in normal and neoplastic keratinocytes

    Henry Hennings;Francis H. Kruszewski;Stuart H. Yuspa;Robert W. Tucker

  • The suprabasal expression of alpha 6 beta 4 integrin is associated with a high risk for malignant progression in mouse skin carcinogenesis.

    Tamar Tennenbaum;Arin K. Weiner;Adam J. Belanger;Adam B. Glick

  • RING protein Trim32 associated with skin carcinogenesis has anti-apoptotic and E3-ubiquitin ligase properties.

    Elizabeth J. Horn;Elizabeth J. Horn;Amador Albor;Yuangang Liu;Sally El-Hizawi

  • Critical Aspects of Initiation, Promotion, and Progression in Multistage Epidermal Carcinogenesis

    Henry Hennings;Adam B. Glick;David A. Greenhalgh;David L. Morgan

  • Phorbol ester tumor promoters induce epidermal transglutaminase activity

    Stuart H. Yuspa;Theresa Ben;Henry Hennings;Ulrike Lichti

  • Factors influencing calcium-induced terminal differentiation in cultured mouse epidermal cells.

    Henry Hennings;Karen A. Holbrook;Stuart H. Yuspa

  • Comparison of two-stage epidermal carcinogenesis initiated by 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene or N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine in newborn and adult SENCAR and BALB/c mice.

    Henry Hennings;Deborah Devor;Martin L. Wenk;Thomas J. Slaga

Frequent Co-Authors

Stuart H. Yuspa
Stuart H. Yuspa National Institutes of Health
Adam B. Glick
Adam B. Glick Pennsylvania State University
David L. Morgan
David L. Morgan Portland State University
Dennis R. Roop
Dennis R. Roop University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Thomas J. Slaga
Thomas J. Slaga The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Peter M. Blumberg
Peter M. Blumberg National Institutes of Health
Peter M. Steinert
Peter M. Steinert National Institutes of Health
George R. Pettit
George R. Pettit Arizona State University
Andrzej A. Dlugosz
Andrzej A. Dlugosz University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Nancy H. Colburn
Nancy H. Colburn National Institutes of Health

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