World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Genetics

D-Index
79
Citations
20146
World Ranking
1646
National Ranking
757

Molecular Biology

D-Index
79
Citations
20146
World Ranking
1046
National Ranking
548

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2012 - Member of the National Academy of Sciences

Overview

Louise T. Chow is affiliated with the University of Alabama at Birmingham in the United States. Their research mainly spans the fields of Biochemistry, Genetics, and Molecular Biology, with particular focus on Molecular Biology, Genetics, Oncology, Epidemiology, and Cancer Research. The main topics of their work include RNA Research and Splicing, Ubiquitin and Proteasome Pathways, Nuclear Structure and Function, Cervical Cancer and HPV Research, Cancer-related Molecular Mechanisms, Circular RNAs in Diseases, and Protein Degradation and Inhibitors.

Louise T. Chow has authored publications in several scientific venues. Notably, they have contributed to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (three publications), UNC Libraries (two publications), Molecular Cell, Cell Reports, and Methods in Molecular Biology.

Some of their recent papers include:

  • Oncogenic HPV promotes the expression of the long noncoding RNA lnc-FANCI-2 through E7 and YY1 (2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
  • IDR-targeting compounds suppress HPV genome replication via disruption of phospho-BRD4 association with DNA damage response factors (2023, Molecular Cell)
  • The male germline-specific protein MAPS is indispensable for pachynema progression and fertility (2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
  • The male pachynema-specific protein MAPS drives phase separation in vitro and regulates sex body formation and chromatin behaviors in vivo (2024, Cell Reports)
  • Application of a Novel CL7/Im7 Affinity System in Purification of Complex and Pharmaceutical Proteins (2022, Methods in Molecular Biology)

Frequent co-authors include Hengbin Wang, N. Sanjib Banerjee, Zexiong Lin, Dongteng Liu, and William S.B. Yeung.

Their research contributions cover multiple aspects of molecular and cellular biology, with a focus on mechanisms related to cancer, viral oncogenesis, RNA processing, and protein regulation systems.

Louise T. Chow was recognized as a Member of the National Academy of Sciences in 2012.

Best Publications

  • An amazing sequence arrangement at the 5′ ends of adenovirus 2 messenger RNA

    Louise T. Chow;Richard E. Gelinas;Thomas R. Broker;Richard J. Roberts

  • Identification of mutations in the COL4A5 collagen gene in Alport syndrome.

    David F. Barker;Sirkka Liisa Hostikka;Jing Zhou;Louise T. Chow

  • Complex splicing patterns of RNAs from the early regions of adenovirus-2

    Louise T. Chow;Thomas R. Broker;James B. Lewis

  • Human papillomavirus type 16 and 18 gene expression in cervical neoplasias.

    Mark H. Stoler;Cheryl R. Rhodes;Cheryl R. Rhodes;April Whitbeck;April Whitbeck;Steven M. Wolinsky;Steven M. Wolinsky

  • Differentiation-dependent up-regulation of the human papillomavirus E7 gene reactivates cellular DNA replication in suprabasal differentiated keratinocytes.

    Shinta Cheng;Delf-Christian Schmidt-Grimminger;Thomas Murant;Thomas R. Broker

  • Complete structure of the human gene for 92-kDa type IV collagenase. Divergent regulation of expression for the 92- and 72-kilodalton enzyme genes in HT-1080 cells.

    P. Huhtala;A. Tuuttila;L.T. Chow;J. Lohi

  • Structure of the human type IV collagenase gene.

    P Huhtala;L T Chow;K Tryggvason

  • Viral E1 and E2 proteins support replication of homologous and heterologous papillomaviral origins.

    Cheng Ming Chiang;Mart Ustav;Arne Stenlund;Thau F. Ho

  • Cell cycle-regulated phosphorylation of p220(NPAT) by cyclin E/Cdk2 in Cajal bodies promotes histone gene transcription.

    Tianlin Ma;Brian A. Van Tine;Yue Wei;Michelle D. Garrett

  • A map of cytoplasmic RNA transcripts from lytic adenovirus type 2, determined by electron microscopy of RNA:DNA hybrids

    Louise T. Chow;James M. Roberts;James B. Lewis;Thomas R. Broker

  • Oncogenic HPV infection interrupts the expression of tumor-suppressive miR-34a through viral oncoprotein E6

    Xiaohong Wang;Hsu Kun Wang;J. Philip Mccoy;Nilam S. Banerjee

  • Differentiation-linked human papillomavirus types 6 and 11 transcription in genital condylomata revealed by in situ hybridization with message-specific RNA probes

    Mark H. Stoler;Steven M. Wolinsky;April Whitbeck;Thomas R. Broker

  • Human papillomavirus types 6 and 11 mRNAs from genital condylomata acuminata.

    L T Chow;M Nasseri;S M Wolinsky;T R Broker

  • Identification of the gene and mRNA for the adenovirus terminal protein precursor

    Bruce W. Stillman;James B. Lewis;Louise T. Chow;Michael B. Mathews

  • Production of human papillomavirus and modulation of the infectious program in epithelial raft cultures. OFF.

    S C Dollard;J L Wilson;L M Demeter;W Bonnez

  • The natural history of human papillomavirus infections of the mucosal epithelia

    Louise T. Chow;Thomas R. Broker;Bettie M. Steinberg

  • microRNAs are biomarkers of oncogenic human papillomavirus infections.

    Xiaohong Wang;Hsu Kun Wang;Yang Li;Yang Li;Markus Hafner;Markus Hafner

  • Oncogene expression cloning by retroviral transduction of adenovirus E1A-immortalized rat kidney RK3E cells: transformation of a host with epithelial features by c-MYC and the zinc finger protein GKLF.

    K. W. Foster;Songrong Ren;I. D. Louro;S. M. Lobo-Ruppert

  • The spliced structures of adenovirus 2 fiber message and the other late mRNAs

    Louise T. Chow;Thomas R. Broker

  • Robust production and passaging of infectious HPV in squamous epithelium of primary human keratinocytes.

    Hsu-Kun Wang;Aaron A. Duffy;Thomas R. Broker;Louise T. Chow

Frequent Co-Authors

Thomas R. Broker
Thomas R. Broker University of Alabama at Birmingham
Cheng Ming Chiang
Cheng Ming Chiang The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Mark H. Stoler
Mark H. Stoler University of Virginia
Craig Meyers
Craig Meyers Pennsylvania State University
Zhi-Ming Zheng
Zhi-Ming Zheng National Institutes of Health
Steven M. Wolinsky
Steven M. Wolinsky Northwestern University
Renske D.M. Steenbergen
Renske D.M. Steenbergen University of Amsterdam
David T. Curiel
David T. Curiel Washington University in St. Louis
J. Wade Harper
J. Wade Harper Harvard Medical School
Norman Davidson
Norman Davidson California Institute of Technology

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