World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
64
Citations
18524
World Ranking
9510
National Ranking
4199

Overview

Jeffrey M. Bergelson is affiliated with Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of Medicine and Biochemistry, Genetics, and Molecular Biology, with a focus on Genetics, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, Molecular Biology, Infectious Diseases, and Animal Science and Zoology as subfields of study.

The scientist's work covers a range of topics, including virus-based gene therapy research, viral infections and immunology research, RNA regulation and disease, viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology, animal virus infections studies, infective endocarditis diagnosis and management, and orthopedic infections and treatments.

Bergelson has contributed papers to notable publication venues, including UNC Libraries and PLoS Pathogens. Notable publications include:

  • Enterovirus A71 does not meet the uncoating receptor SCARB2 at the cell surface (2024, PLoS Pathogens)
  • Retargeting the Coxsackievirus and Adenovirus Receptor to the Apical Surface of Polarized Epithelial Cells Reveals the Glycocalyx as a Barrier to Adenovirus-Mediated Gene Transfer (2020, UNC Libraries)
  • The coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor is a transmembrane component of the tight junction (2021, UNC Libraries)

Frequent collaborators include Yorihiro Nishimura, Kei Sato, Yoshio Koyanagi, Takaji Wakita, and Masamichi Muramatsu.

Best Publications

  • Isolation of a Common Receptor for Coxsackie B Viruses and Adenoviruses 2 and 5

    Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Jennifer A. Cunningham;Gustavo Droguett;Evelyn A. Kurt-Jones

  • The coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor is a transmembrane component of the tight junction.

    Christopher J. Cohen;Joseph T.C. Shieh;Raymond J. Pickles;Takatsugu Okegawa

  • The Coxsackievirus-Adenovirus Receptor Protein Can Function as a Cellular Attachment Protein for Adenovirus Serotypes from Subgroups A, C, D, E, and F

    Peter W. Roelvink;Alena Lizonova;Jennifer G. M. Lee;Yuan Li

  • Virus-induced Abl and Fyn kinase signals permit coxsackievirus entry through epithelial tight junctions

    Carolyn B. Coyne;Carolyn B. Coyne;Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Jeffrey M. Bergelson

  • The Murine CAR Homolog Is a Receptor for Coxsackie B Viruses and Adenoviruses

    Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Anita Krithivas;Leo Celi;Gustavo Droguett

  • Basolateral localization of fiber receptors limits adenovirus infection from the apical surface of airway epithelia.

    Robert W. Walters;Teresa Grunst;Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Robert W. Finberg

  • Loss of Adenoviral Receptor Expression in Human Bladder Cancer Cells: A Potential Impact on the Efficacy of Gene Therapy

    Yingming Li;Rey Chen Pong;Jeffrey M. Bergelson;M. Craig Hall

  • DECAY-ACCELERATING FACTOR (CD55), A GLYCOSYLPHOSPHATIDYLINOSITOL-ANCHORED COMPLEMENT REGULATORY PROTEIN, IS A RECEPTOR FOR SEVERAL ECHOVIRUSES

    J M Bergelson;M Chan;K R Solomon;N F St John

  • Identification of the integrin VLA-2 as a receptor for echovirus 1.

    Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Michael P. Shepley;Bosco M. C. Chan;Martin E. Hemler

  • Crystal structure of the I domain from integrin alpha2beta1.

    Jonas Emsley;Sandra L. King;Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Robert C. Liddington

  • Coxsackievirus B3 adapted to growth in RD cells binds to decay-accelerating factor (CD55)

    J M Bergelson;J G Mohanty;R L Crowell;N F St John

  • CAR: A virus receptor within the tight junction

    Carolyn B Coyne;Jeffrey M Bergelson

  • Coxsackievirus entry across epithelial tight junctions requires occludin and the small GTPases Rab34 and Rab5.

    Carolyn B. Coyne;Le Shen;Jerrold R. Turner;Jeffrey M. Bergelson;Jeffrey M. Bergelson

  • The Dual Impact of Coxsackie and Adenovirus Receptor Expression on Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy

    Takatsugu Okegawa;Yingming Li;Rey-Chen Pong;Jeffrey M. Bergelson

  • The Mechanism of the Growth-inhibitory Effect of Coxsackie and Adenovirus Receptor (CAR) on Human Bladder Cancer: A Functional Analysis of CAR Protein Structure

    Takatsugu Okegawa;Rey Chen Pong;Yingming Li;Jeffrey M. Bergelson

  • Human Coxsackie-Adenovirus Receptor Is Colocalized With Integrins αvβ3 and αvβ5 on the Cardiomyocyte Sarcolemma and Upregulated in Dilated Cardiomyopathy Implications for Cardiotropic Viral Infections

    Michel Noutsias;Henry Fechner;Henriëtte de Jonge;Xiaomin Wang

  • CAR-dependent and CAR-independent pathways of adenovirus vector–mediated gene transfer and expression in human fibroblasts

    Chisa Hidaka;Eric Milano;Philip L. Leopold;Jeffrey M. Bergelson

  • β1 Integrin Mediates Internalization of Mammalian Reovirus

    Melissa S. Maginnis;J. Craig Forrest;Sarah A. Kopecky-Bromberg;S. Kent Dickeson

  • Coxsackievirus and Adenovirus Receptor Cytoplasmic and Transmembrane Domains Are Not Essential for Coxsackievirus and Adenovirus Infection

    Xianghong Wang;Jeffrey M. Bergelson

  • LOSS OF ADENOVIRAL RECEPTOR EXPRESSION IN HUMAN BLADDER CANCER CELLS- A POTENTIAL IMPACT ON THE EFFICACY OF GENE THERAPY

    Rey-Chen Pong;Yingming Li;M. Craig Hall;Ching-Ping Tseng

Frequent Co-Authors

Robert W. Finberg
Robert W. Finberg University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School
James M. Wilson
James M. Wilson University of Pennsylvania
John F. Modlin
John F. Modlin Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Guangping Gao
Guangping Gao University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School
Martin E. Hemler
Martin E. Hemler Harvard University
Yingming Li
Yingming Li University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Neil R. Hackett
Neil R. Hackett Cornell University
Ronald G. Crystal
Ronald G. Crystal Cornell University
Carolyn B. Coyne
Carolyn B. Coyne Duke University
Raymond J. Pickles
Raymond J. Pickles University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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