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Immunology

D-Index
69
Citations
14840
World Ranking
2525
National Ranking
219

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2002 - Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh

Overview

Jonathan R. Lamb is affiliated with Imperial College London in the United Kingdom. Their research spans multiple fields including Medicine and Environmental Science, with a focus on subfields such as Surgery, Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine, Global and Planetary Change, Hepatology, and Immunology.

Their scholarly work includes a significant number of publications within the medicine domain, particularly related to pediatric hepatobiliary diseases, liver diseases and immunity, as well as neonatal respiratory health and infections. Environmental science contributions focus on atmospheric and environmental gas dynamics and global planetary changes.

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Jonathan R. Lamb include Ruizhong Zhang, Huimin Xia, Ming Fu, Zefeng Lin, and Yan Zhang. These collaborations are reflected in publications across several journals and venues.

  • Journal of Hepatology
  • Atmosphere
  • Clinical Science
  • Frontiers in Immunology
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Selected recent publications include:

  • CD177+ cells produce neutrophil extracellular traps that promote biliary atresia (2022, Journal of Hepatology)
  • Landfill Emissions of Methane Inferred from Unmanned Aerial Vehicle and Mobile Ground Measurements (2022, Atmosphere)
  • Down-regulation of STAT3 enhanced chemokine expression and neutrophil recruitment in biliary atresia (2021, Clinical Science)
  • P2Y1R Ligation Suppresses Th17 Cell Differentiation and Alleviates Colonic Inflammation in an AMPK-Dependent Manner (2022, Frontiers in Immunology)
  • Dynamics of repair and regeneration of adult zebrafish respiratory gill tissue after cryoinjury (2021, bioRxiv [Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory])

Jonathan R. Lamb has also contributed to book publications, including a work titled Growing Toward a Low-Carbon Future: Estimating Greenhouse Gas Emissions in California's Westlands Water District, published by RAND Corporation eBooks in 2023.

Research topics covered by Jonathan R. Lamb include:

  • Pediatric Hepatobiliary Diseases and Treatments
  • Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
  • Liver Diseases and Immunity
  • Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
  • Neutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative Mechanisms
  • Neonatal and Maternal Infections
  • Acute Kidney Injury Research

Jonathan R. Lamb was awarded the title Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2002.

Best Publications

  • Suppression of allergic airway inflammation by helminth-induced regulatory T cells

    Mark S. Wilson;Matthew D. Taylor;Adam Balic;Constance A.M. Finney

  • Induction of tolerance in influenza virus-immune T lymphocyte clones with synthetic peptides of influenza hemagglutinin.

    Jonathan R. Lamb;Barry J. Skidmore;Nicola Green;Jacques M. Chiller

  • Epithelial cells expressing aberrant MHC class II determinants can present antigen to cloned human T cells

    Marco Londei;Jonathan R. Lamb;Gian Franco Bottazzo;Marc Feldmann

  • Inhibition of T cell and antibody responses to house dust mite allergen by inhalation of the dominant T cell epitope in naive and sensitized mice.

    Gerard F. Hoyne;Robyn E. O’hehir;David C. Wraith;Wayne R. Thomas

  • Inhibitory Effects of Apoptotic Cell Ingestion upon Endotoxin-Driven Myeloid Dendritic Cell Maturation

    Lynda M. Stuart;Mark Lucas;Cathy Simpson;Jonathan Lamb

  • Serrate1-induced Notch signalling regulates the decision between immunity and tolerance made by peripheral CD4+ T cells

    Gerard F. Hoyne;Isabelle Le Roux;Marta Corsin-Jimenez;Karen Tan

  • Tolerance of T-cell clones is associated with membrane antigen changes.

    E. D. Zanders;J. R. Lamb;M. Feldmann;N. Green

  • Intranasal Exposure to Protein Antigen Induces Immunological Tolerance Mediated by Functionally Disabled CD4+ T Cells

    Daphne C. Tsitoura;Rosemarie H. DeKruyff;Jonathan R. Lamb;Dale T. Umetsu

  • SB-restricted presentation of influenza and herpes simplex virus antigens to human T-Iymphocyte clones

    David D. Eckels;Phil Lake;Jonathan R. Lamb;Armead H. Johnson

  • Antigen presentation by keratinocytes induces tolerance in human T cells.

    Vineeta Bal;Angus McIndoe;Graeme Denton;David Hudson

  • Structural model of HLA-DR1 restricted T cell antigen recognition.

    Jonathan B. Rothbard;Robert I. Lechler;Kevin Howland;Vineeta Bal

  • Human T-cell clones recognize chemically synthesized peptides of influenza haemagglutinin

    Unknown

  • Binary and ternary complexes between T-cell receptor, class II MHC and superantigen in vitro

    Alpna Seth;Lawrence J. Stern;Tom H. M. Ottenhoff;Isaac Engel;Isaac Engel

  • Mapping of T cell epitopes using recombinant antigens and synthetic peptides.

    J. R. Lamb;Juraj Ivanyi;A. D. M. Rees;J. B. Rothbard

  • The specificity and regulation of T-cell responsiveness to allergens.

    Robyn E. O'Hehir;Richard D. Garman;Julia L. Greenstein;Jonathan R. Lamb

  • Immunological activity of a 38-kilodalton protein purified from Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

    D Young;L Kent;A Rees;J Lamb

  • Induction of specific clonal anergy in human T lymphocytes by Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins.

    Robyn E. O'Hehir;Jonathan R. Lamb

  • Expression of the developmental Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signalling pathway is up-regulated in chronic lung fibrosis and the Shh receptor patched 1 is present in circulating T lymphocytes.

    Gareth A Stewart;Gerard F Hoyne;Sharon A Ahmad;Elizabeth Jarman

  • Induction of a type 1 immune response to a recombinant antigen from Mycobacterium tuberculosis expressed in Mycobacterium vaccae.

    Christiane Abou-Zeid;Marie Pierre Gares;Jacqueline Inwald;Riny Janssen

  • Major histocompatibility complex independent clonal T cell anergy by direct interaction of Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin B with the T cell antigen receptor.

    Colin R.A. Hewitt;Jonathan R. Lamb;John Hayball;Mark Hill

  • Essential requirement for major histocompatibility complex recognition in T-cell tolerance induction.

    Jonathan R. Lamb;Marc Feldmann

Frequent Co-Authors

Robyn E O'Hehir
Robyn E O'Hehir Monash University
Margaret J. Dallman
Margaret J. Dallman Imperial College London
Paul K.H. Tam
Paul K.H. Tam Macau University of Science and Technology
Sarah E. M. Howie
Sarah E. M. Howie University of Edinburgh
Jonathan B. Rothbard
Jonathan B. Rothbard 180 Life Sciences
John D. Hayball
John D. Hayball University of South Australia
Douglas B. Young
Douglas B. Young Imperial College London
Robert I. Lechler
Robert I. Lechler King's College London
Michael John Owen
Michael John Owen Cardiff University
Hans Yssel
Hans Yssel Sorbonne University

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