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D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
61
Citations
13534
World Ranking
11336
National Ranking
4910

Overview

James Bristow is affiliated with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the United States. Their research spans multiple fields including molecular biology, building and construction, modeling and simulation, oncology, and health.

The recent papers featuring James Bristow's contributions include the following:

  • Genome-wide fetalization of enhancer architecture in heart disease, 2022, Cell Reports
  • Construction stakeholders' perceived benefits and barriers for environment-friendly modular construction in a hospitality centric environment, 2021, International Journal of Industrialized Construction
  • A Semi-portable Enclosure to Measure Emission Rates from Small Fugitive Sources: Leaf Blower Dust Example, 2021, Aerosol and Air Quality Research
  • Designing sustainable and resilient water and energy infrastructure for a campus in Rwanda, 2022, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering
  • An effective volunteer community-based COVID-19 response program: the Vashon, WA Medical Reserve Corp Experience, 2022, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

The main topics covered in Bristow's work highlight an emphasis on epidemiological and healthcare aspects, especially related to COVID-19, as well as biomedical and construction domains. Their primary topics include:

  • COVID-19 epidemiological studies
  • COVID-19 and healthcare impacts
  • Congenital heart defects research
  • RNA modifications and cancer
  • RNA Research and Splicing
  • BIM and Construction Integration
  • Construction Project Management and Performance

Frequent collaborative partners in their research include Clayton Olney, John Weinshel, Robert Rovig, Rick L. Wallace, and Karla Lindquist. Each has co-authored multiple papers alongside Bristow.

James Bristow has published work in a diverse array of scientific venues, indicating a multidisciplinary approach. These publication venues include:

  • Cell Reports
  • International Journal of Industrialized Construction
  • Aerosol and Air Quality Research
  • Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Best Publications

  • Airway microbiota and bronchial hyperresponsiveness in patients with suboptimally controlled asthma.

    Yvonne J. Huang;Craig E. Nelson;Eoin L. Brodie;Todd Z. DeSantis

  • Gain-of-function SOS1 mutations cause a distinctive form of Noonan syndrome

    Marco Tartaglia;Len A Pennacchio;Len A Pennacchio;Chen Zhao;Kamlesh K Yadav

  • Common Epicardial Origin of Coronary Vascular Smooth Muscle, Perivascular Fibroblasts, and Intermyocardial Fibroblasts in the Avian Heart

    Robert W. Dettman;Wilfred Denetclaw;Charles P. Ordahl;James Bristow

  • Mutant phenotypes for thousands of bacterial genes of unknown function

    Morgan N. Price;Kelly M. Wetmore;R. Jordan Waters;Mark Callaghan

  • ChIP-Seq identification of weakly conserved heart enhancers

    Matthew J Blow;David J McCulley;Zirong Li;Tao Zhang

  • Rapid Quantification of Mutant Fitness in Diverse Bacteria by Sequencing Randomly Bar-Coded Transposons

    Kelly M. Wetmore;Morgan N. Price;Robert J. Waters;Jacob S. Lamson

  • A recessive form of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome caused by tenascin-X deficiency.

    Joost Schalkwijk;Manon C. Zweers;Peter M. Steijlen;Willow B. Dean

  • Tenascin–X deficiency is associated with Ehlers–Danlos syndrome

    Grant H. Burch;Yan Gong;Wenhui Liu;Robert W. Dettman

  • Tenascin-X: a novel extracellular matrix protein encoded by the human XB gene overlapping P450c21B

    James Bristow;Meng Kian Tee;Stephen E. Gitelman;Synthia H. Mellon

  • Large-scale discovery of enhancers from human heart tissue

    Dalit May;Matthew J Blow;Matthew J Blow;Tommy Kaplan;Tommy Kaplan;David J McCulley

  • Tenascin-X deficiency mimics Ehlers-Danlos syndrome in mice through alteration of collagen deposition.

    Jau Ren Mao;Glen Taylor;Willow B Dean;Willow B Dean;Diane R Wagner

  • The Airborne Metagenome in an Indoor Urban Environment

    Susannah G. Tringe;Susannah G. Tringe;Tao Zhang;Xuguo Liu;Yiting Yu

  • Expression profiling reveals distinct sets of genes altered during induction and regression of cardiac hypertrophy

    Carl J. Friddle;Teiichiro Koga;Edward M. Rubin;James Bristow

  • The Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: on beyond collagens

    Jau-Ren Mao;James Bristow

  • One Bacterial Cell, One Complete Genome

    Tanja Woyke;Damon Tighe;Konstantinos Mavromatis;Alicia Clum

  • Haploinsufficiency of TNXB Is Associated with Hypermobility Type of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome

    Manon C. Zweers;Jim Bristow;Peter M. Steijlen;Willow B. Dean

  • Positive and negative regulation of epicardial-mesenchymal transformation during avian heart development.

    Christopher J. Morabito;Robert W. Dettman;Javier Kattan;J.Michael Collier

  • Loss of Bacterial Diversity during Antibiotic Treatment of Intubated Patients Colonized with Pseudomonas aeruginosa

    J. L. Flanagan;E. L. Brodie;L. Weng;S. V. Lynch

  • Transcript encoded on the opposite strand of the human steroid 21-hydroxylase/complement component C4 gene locus.

    Yves Morel;James Bristow;Stephen E. Gitelman;Walter L. Miller

  • Loss of Bacterial Diversity During Antibiotic Treatment of Intubated Patients Colonized with Pseudomonas aeruginosa - eScholarship

    J.L. Flanagan;L. Weng;E.L. Brodie;S.V. Lynch

Frequent Co-Authors

Len A. Pennacchio
Len A. Pennacchio Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Axel Visel
Axel Visel Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Edward M. Rubin
Edward M. Rubin Joint Genome Institute
Walter L. Miller
Walter L. Miller University of California, San Francisco
Abraham M. Rudolph
Abraham M. Rudolph University of California, San Francisco
Stephen M. Black
Stephen M. Black Florida International University
Joost Schalkwijk
Joost Schalkwijk Radboud University
Adam P. Arkin
Adam P. Arkin Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Bruno Dallapiccola
Bruno Dallapiccola Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital
Marco Tartaglia
Marco Tartaglia Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital

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