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D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
51
Citations
10362
World Ranking
17097
National Ranking
7047

Overview

James R. Gum was affiliated with the University of California, San Francisco in the United States. Their career was linked to this institution, where they contributed to academic research before their passing.

No specific publications, co-authors, or detailed research topics are available for inclusion in this profile. There is no record of recent papers, publication venues, book publications, or main and subfields of study related to their name in the provided data.

Due to the lack of detailed bibliographic or research data, it is not possible to outline the precise scope or impact of James R. Gum's scientific work. There is also no information on awards or recognitions received during their career.

Best Publications

  • Molecular cloning of human intestinal mucin cDNAs. Sequence analysis and evidence for genetic polymorphism.

    J. R. Gum;James Byrd;J. W. Hicks;N. W. Toribara

  • BRAF Mutation Is Frequently Present in Sporadic Colorectal Cancer with Methylated hMLH1, But Not in Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colorectal Cancer

    Guoren Deng;Ian Bell;Suzanne Crawley;James Gum

  • Molecular cloning of human intestinal mucin (MUC2) cDNA. Identification of the amino terminus and overall sequence similarity to prepro-von Willebrand factor.

    J R Gum;J W Hicks;N W Toribara;B Siddiki

  • Human gastric mucin. Identification of a unique species by expression cloning.

    Neil W. Toribara;Anthony M. Roberton;Samuel B. Ho;Wen Lin Kuo

  • Molecular cloning of cDNAs derived from a novel human intestinal mucin gene.

    James R. Gum;James W. Hicks;James W. Hicks;Dallas M. Swallow;Robert L. Lagace;Robert L. Lagace

  • Activation of NF-κB via a Src-dependent Ras-MAPK-pp90rsk pathway is required for Pseudomonas aeruginosa-induced mucin overproduction in epithelial cells

    Jian-Dong Li;Weijun Feng;Marianne Gallup;Jae-Ho Kim

  • Localization of mucin (MUC2 and MUC3) messenger RNA and peptide expression in human normal intestine and colon cancer.

    Sae-Kyung Chang;Austin F. Dohrman;Carol B. Basbaum;Samuel B. Ho

  • Transcriptional activation of mucin by Pseudomonas aeruginosa lipopolysaccharide in the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis lung disease

    Jian-Dong Li;Austin F. Dohrman;Marianne Gallup;Susumu Miyata

  • The human MUC2 intestinal mucin has cysteine-rich subdomains located both upstream and downstream of its central repetitive region.

    Jr Jr Gum;JW Hicks;NW Toribara;EM Rothe

  • Human mucin genes assigned to 11p15.5: identification and organization of a cluster of genes.

    Pascal Pigny;Pascal Pigny;Veronique Guyonnet-Duperat;Alexander S. Hill;Wendy S. Pratt

  • Differential expression of the human mucin genes MUC1 to MUC5 in relation to growth and differentiation of different mucus-secreting HT-29 cell subpopulations

    T. Lesuffleur;N. Porchet;J.P. Aubert;D. Swallow

  • MUC17, a novel membrane-tethered mucin

    James R. Gum;James R. Gum;Suzanne C. Crawley;Suzanne C. Crawley;James W. Hicks;David E. Szymkowski

  • MUC-2 human small intestinal mucin gene structure. Repeated arrays and polymorphism.

    Neil W. Toribara;James R. Gum;Patrick J. Culhane;Robert E. Lagace

  • The N Terminus of the MUC2 Mucin Forms Trimers That Are Held Together within a Trypsin-resistant Core Fragment

    Klaus Godl;Malin E.V. Johansson;Martin E. Lidell;Matthias Mörgelin

  • Effects of sodium butyrate on human colonic adenocarcinoma cells. Induction of placental-like alkaline phosphatase.

    J. R. Gum;W. K. Kam;James Byrd;J. W. Hicks

  • Biosynthesis of Alkaline Phosphatase During Differentiation of the Human Colon Cancer Cell Line Caco-2

    Hisashi Matsumoto;Roger H. Erickson;James R. Gum;Masahiro Yoshioka

  • Efficient detection of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer gene carriers by screening for tumor microsatellite instability before germline genetic testing.

    Jonathan P. Terdiman;James R. Gum;Peggy G. Conrad;Glenn A. Miller

  • Diversity of mucin genes, structure, function, and expression

    Young S. Kim;James R. Gum

  • The Carboxyl-terminal Sequence of the Human Secretory Mucin, MUC6 ANALYSIS OF THE PRIMARY AMINO ACID SEQUENCE

    Neil W. Toribara;Samuel B. Ho;Elizabeth Gum;James R. Gum

  • Mice expressing SV40 T antigen directed by the intestinal trefoil factor promoter develop tumors resembling human small cell carcinoma of the colon.

    James R. Gum;James W. Hicks;Suzanne C. Crawley;Stacey C. Yang

Frequent Co-Authors

Young S. Kim
Young S. Kim University of California, San Francisco
James W. Hicks
James W. Hicks University of Southern California
Dallas M. Swallow
Dallas M. Swallow University College London
Carol Basbaum
Carol Basbaum University of California, San Francisco
Jian-Dong Li
Jian-Dong Li Georgia State University
Samuel B. Ho
Samuel B. Ho Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences
Derek T. A. Lamport
Derek T. A. Lamport University of Sussex
Nicole Porchet
Nicole Porchet University of Lille
Gunnar C. Hansson
Gunnar C. Hansson University of Gothenburg
Charles J. Epstein
Charles J. Epstein University of California, San Francisco

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