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Microbiology

D-Index
58
Citations
14623
World Ranking
3390
National Ranking
132

Overview

Lia van der Hoek is affiliated with the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. Their research primarily lies within the broad fields of Medicine and Agricultural and Biological Sciences, with a significant focus on infectious diseases, epidemiology, genetics, and animal science.

The scientist's work covers several subfields, including Infectious Diseases, Animal Science and Zoology, Epidemiology, Genetics, and Plant Science. Key research topics include Animal Virus Infection Studies, SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research, COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies, Virus-based Gene Therapy Research, Viral Gastroenteritis Research and Epidemiology, COVID-19 Epidemiological Studies, and Plant Virus Research Studies.

Frequent publication venues for Lia van der Hoek include Viruses, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Microbiology Spectrum, International Journal of Infectious Diseases, and FEMS Microbiology Reviews.

Key recent papers authored or co-authored by Lia van der Hoek include these works:

  • Seasonal coronavirus protective immunity is short-lasting, 2020, Nature Medicine
  • Human anelloviruses: diverse, omnipresent and commensal members of the virome, 2020, FEMS Microbiology Reviews
  • ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Coronaviridae 2023, 2023, Journal of General Virology
  • Aerosol persistence in relation to possible transmission of SARS-CoV-2, 2020, Physics of Fluids
  • Coronavirus protective immunity is short-lasting, 2020, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Lia van der Hoek collaborates frequently with several researchers. Among their most common coauthors are Martin Deijs, Margreet Bakker, Arthur W. D. Edridge, Maarten F. Jebbink, and Cormac M. Kinsella. These collaborations have contributed to a variety of publications and research initiatives involving viral infections and immune responses.

Best Publications

  • Identification of a new human coronavirus

    Lia van der Hoek;Krzysztof Pyrc;Maarten F Jebbink;Wilma Vermeulen-Oost

  • Human coronavirus NL63 employs the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus receptor for cellular entry

    Heike Hofmann;Krzysztof Pyrc;Lia van der Hoek;Martina Geier

  • Seasonal coronavirus protective immunity is short-lasting.

    Arthur W. D. Edridge;Joanna Kaczorowska;Alexis C. R. Hoste;Margreet Bakker

  • Influenza and other respiratory viruses involved in severe acute respiratory disease in northern Italy during the pandemic and postpandemic period (2009-2011).

    Elena Pariani;Marianna Martinelli;Marta Canuti;Seyed Mohammad Jazaeri Farsani

  • Simultaneous Treatment of Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells with Serine and Cysteine Protease Inhibitors Prevents Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Entry

    Miyuki Kawase;Kazuya Shirato;Lia van der Hoek;Fumihiro Taguchi

  • Human coronaviruses: what do they cause?

    Lia van der Hoek

  • Croup is associated with the novel coronavirus NL63.

    Lia van der Hoek;Klaus Sure;Gabriele Ihorst;Alexander Stang

  • The novel human coronaviruses NL63 and HKU1.

    Krzysztof Pyrc;Ben Berkhout;Lia van der Hoek

  • Human Coronavirus NL63, France

    Astrid Vabret;Thomas Mourez;Julia Dina;Lia van der Hoek

  • Evidence for an Ancestral Association of Human Coronavirus 229E with Bats

    Victor Max Corman;Heather J Baldwin;Heather J Baldwin;Adriana Fumie Tateno;Adriana Fumie Tateno;Rodrigo Melim Zerbinati;Rodrigo Melim Zerbinati

  • Human coronavirus NL63, a new respiratory virus

    Lia van der Hoek;Krzysztof Pyrc;Ben Berkhout

  • Human Bocavirus Can Be Cultured in Differentiated Human Airway Epithelial Cells

    Ronald Dijkman;Sylvie M. Koekkoek;Richard Molenkamp;Oliver Schildgen

  • Human Coronavirus NL63 and 229E Seroconversion in Children

    Ronald Dijkman;Maarten F. Jebbink;Nawal Bahia El Idrissi;Krzysztof Pyrc

  • Mosaic structure of human coronavirus NL63, one thousand years of evolution.

    Krzysztof Pyrc;Ronald Dijkman;Lea Deng;Maarten F. Jebbink

  • The dominance of human coronavirus OC43 and NL63 infections in infants

    Ronald Dijkman;Maarten F. Jebbink;Eleanor Gaunt;John W.A. Rossen;John W.A. Rossen

  • A novel pancoronavirus RT-PCR assay: frequent detection of human coronavirus NL63 in children hospitalized with respiratory tract infections in Belgium

    Elien Moës;Leen Vijgen;Els Keyaerts;Kalina Zlateva

  • Isolation and Characterization of Current Human Coronavirus Strains in Primary Human Epithelial Cell Cultures Reveal Differences in Target Cell Tropism

    Ronald Dijkman;Maarten F. Jebbink;Sylvie M. Koekkoek;Martin Deijs

  • Culturing the unculturable: human coronavirus HKU1 infects, replicates, and produces progeny virions in human ciliated airway epithelial cell cultures.

    Krzysztof Pyrc;Amy C. Sims;Ronald Dijkman;Maarten Jebbink

  • Replication-dependent downregulation of cellular angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 protein expression by human coronavirus NL63

    Ronald Dijkman;Maarten F. Jebbink;Martin Deijs;Aleksandra Milewska

  • Establishment of new transmissible and drug-sensitive human immunodeficiency virus type 1 wild types due to transmission of nucleoside analogue-resistant virus.

    Anthony de Ronde;Maaike van Dooren;Lia van der Hoek;Denise Bouwhuis

  • Human anelloviruses: diverse, omnipresent and commensal members of the virome

    Joanna Kaczorowska;Lia van der Hoek

Frequent Co-Authors

Ben Berkhout
Ben Berkhout University of Amsterdam
Krzysztof Pyrc
Krzysztof Pyrc Jagiellonian University
Ronald Dijkman
Ronald Dijkman University of Bern
Matthew Cotten
Matthew Cotten Wellcome Sanger Institute
Paul Kellam
Paul Kellam Imperial College London
Richard Molenkamp
Richard Molenkamp Erasmus University Rotterdam
Herman Goossens
Herman Goossens University of Antwerp
Margareta Ieven
Margareta Ieven University of Antwerp
Suzanne Jurriaans
Suzanne Jurriaans University of Amsterdam
Maria Prins
Maria Prins University of Amsterdam

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