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Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
103
Citations
54558
World Ranking
1289
National Ranking
756

Medicine

D-Index
103
Citations
54572
World Ranking
7207
National Ranking
3782

Overview

Jeffrey Robbins is affiliated with Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center in the United States. Their research primarily falls within the fields of Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, and Medicine, with a focus on Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, Epidemiology, and Oncology as subfields.

Robbins's work covers several main topics, notably:

  • Ubiquitin and proteasome pathways
  • Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease
  • Cardiomyopathy and Myosin Studies
  • Cardiovascular Effects of Exercise
  • Autophagy in Disease and Therapy
  • Peptidase Inhibition and Analysis
  • Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques

They have contributed research articles to several venues, with multiple publications in:

  • Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
  • Circulation Research
  • The Journal of General Physiology
  • Autophagy
  • European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery

Selected recent papers include:

  • The N terminus of myosin-binding protein C extends toward actin filaments in intact cardiac muscle (2021, The Journal of General Physiology)
  • Ube2v1 Positively Regulates Protein Aggregation by Modulating Ubiquitin Proteasome System Performance Partially Through K63 Ubiquitination (2020, Circulation Research)
  • CYLD exaggerates pressure overload-induced cardiomyopathy via suppressing autolysosome efflux in cardiomyocytes (2020, Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology)
  • A high-throughput screening identifies ZNF418 as a novel regulator of the ubiquitin-proteasome system and autophagy-lysosomal pathway (2020, Autophagy)
  • The Development and Usability of the AMPREDICT Decision Support Tool: A Mixed Methods Study (2021, European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery)

Frequent collaborators in Robbins's research include:

  • James Gulick
  • Hanna Osińska
  • Patrick M. McLendon
  • Erda Alizoti
  • Ellen Orthey

Best Publications

  • Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy

    Daniel J. Klionsky;Fabio C. Abdalla;Hagai Abeliovich;Robert T. Abraham

  • Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (3rd edition)

    Daniel J. Klionsky;Kotb Abdelmohsen;Akihisa Abe;Joynal Abedin

  • A Calcineurin-Dependent Transcriptional Pathway for Cardiac Hypertrophy

    Jeffery D. Molkentin;Jeffery D. Molkentin;Jian Rong Lu;Christopher L. Antos;Bruce Markham

  • Loss of cyclophilin D reveals a critical role for mitochondrial permeability transition in cell death

    Christopher P. Baines;Robert A. Kaiser;Nicole H. Purcell;N. Scott Blair

  • Cardiac Fibrosis: The Fibroblast Awakens.

    Joshua G. Travers;Fadia A. Kamal;Jeffrey Robbins;Katherine E. Yutzey

  • Evidence from a genetic fate-mapping study that stem cells refresh adult mammalian cardiomyocytes after injury

    Patrick C H Hsieh;Vincent F M Segers;Michael E Davis;Catherine MacGillivray

  • Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (3rd edition)

    Daniel J. Klionsky;Kotb Abdelmohsen;Akihisa Abe;Joynal Abedin

  • PKC-alpha regulates cardiac contractility and propensity toward heart failure.

    Julian C Braz;Kimberly Gregory;Anand Pathak;Wen Zhao

  • Tissue-specific regulation of the alpha-myosin heavy chain gene promoter in transgenic mice.

    A Subramaniam;W K Jones;J Gulick;S Wert

  • Macrophage Autophagy Plays a Protective Role in Advanced Atherosclerosis

    Xianghai Liao;Judith C. Sluimer;Ying-Jan Wang;Manikandan Subramanian

  • Prevention of cardiac hypertrophy in mice by calcineurin inhibition.

    Mark A. Sussman;Hae W. Lim;Natalie Gude;Tyler Taigen

  • Imaging cellular signals in the heart in vivo: Cardiac expression of the high-signal Ca2+ indicator GCaMP2

    Yvonne M. Tallini;Masamichi Ohkura;Bum Rak Choi;Guangju Ji

  • Isolation and characterization of the mouse cardiac myosin heavy chain genes.

    J Gulick;A Subramaniam;J Neumann;J Robbins

  • Neural Crest Cells Retain Multipotential Characteristics in the Developing Valves and Label the Cardiac Conduction System

    Tomoki Nakamura;Melissa C. Colbert;Jeffrey Robbins

  • Phenotyping Hypertrophy Eschew Obfuscation

    Gerald W. Dorn;Jeffrey Robbins;Peter H. Sugden

  • Genetic and pharmacologic inhibition of mitochondrial-dependent necrosis attenuates muscular dystrophy

    Douglas P Millay;Michelle A Sargent;Hanna Osinska;Christopher P Baines

  • Circadian rhythms govern cardiac repolarization and arrhythmogenesis

    Darwin Jeyaraj;Saptarsi M. Haldar;Xiaoping Wan;Mark D. McCauley

  • Inhibition of ischemic cardiomyocyte apoptosis through targeted ablation of Bnip3 restrains postinfarction remodeling in mice.

    Abhinav Diwan;Maike Krenz;Faisal M. Syed;Janaka Wansapura

  • Genetic Manipulation of Periostin Expression Reveals a Role in Cardiac Hypertrophy and Ventricular Remodeling

    Toru Oka;Robert A. Kaiser;Jaime Melendez;Jeffery D. Molkentin

  • cardiomyocyte necrosis as a primary mediator of heart failure

    Hiroyuki Nakayama;Xiongwen Chen;Christopher P. Baines;Raisa Klevitsky

Frequent Co-Authors

Jeffery D. Molkentin
Jeffery D. Molkentin Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
John N. Lorenz
John N. Lorenz University of Cincinnati Medical Center
David M. Warshaw
David M. Warshaw University of Vermont
Xuejun Wang
Xuejun Wang University of South Dakota
Evangelia G. Kranias
Evangelia G. Kranias University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Roger Craig
Roger Craig University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School
Gerald W. Dorn
Gerald W. Dorn Washington University in St. Louis
Junichi Sadoshima
Junichi Sadoshima Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Steven R. Houser
Steven R. Houser Temple University

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