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Marie A. Bogoyevitch

Marie A. Bogoyevitch

D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
53
Citations
12005
World Ranking
16038
National Ranking
448

Overview

Marie A. Bogoyevitch is a researcher affiliated with the University of Melbourne in Australia. Their work spans multiple domains within medicine and biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology, with a focus on molecular biology, epidemiology, and pulmonary and respiratory medicine.

The scientist's research topics include respiratory viral infections, neonatal respiratory health, genetic neurodegenerative diseases, nuclear structure and function, as well as mosquito-borne and vector-borne infectious diseases. These areas reflect a broad engagement with both molecular mechanisms and public health concerns related to infectious diseases and neurological disorders.

Frequent collaborators in their work include David A. Jans, Alexander Lee, Mengjie Hu, Sunyuan Zhang, and Sundy N.Y. Yang, indicating a collaborative research environment with expertise spanning virology, cellular biology, and molecular mechanisms.

Marie A. Bogoyevitch's publications have appeared in several journals, including:

  • Antiviral Research
  • Physiological Reviews
  • Nature Communications
  • Scientific Reports
  • Cells

Recent notable papers authored or co-authored by Bogoyevitch include:

  • The broad spectrum antiviral ivermectin targets the host nuclear transport importin α/β1 heterodimer, 2020, Antiviral Research
  • Impact of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infection on Host Functions: Implications for Antiviral Strategies, 2020, Physiological Reviews
  • The ataxin-1 interactome reveals direct connection with multiple disrupted nuclear transport pathways, 2020, Nature Communications
  • Nuclear bodies formed by polyQ-ataxin-1 protein are liquid RNA/protein droplets with tunable dynamics, 2020, Scientific Reports
  • Respiratory Syncytial Virus Matrix Protein Is Sufficient and Necessary to Remodel Host Mitochondria in Infection, 2023, Cells

The scientist's work intersects with several subfields, including cellular and molecular neuroscience, and environmental and occupational health, contributing to a diverse scope of biomedical research. This indicates engagement with both the cellular level functions and broader health impacts of infectious and genetic diseases.

Marie A. Bogoyevitch's body of research provides insights into mechanisms of viral infection, host-pathogen interactions, and the molecular biology underlying neurodegenerative diseases. The interdisciplinary nature of their work places emphasis on understanding complex biological processes relevant to medicine and public health.

Best Publications

  • Stimulation of the Stress-Activated Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Subfamilies in Perfused Heart: p38/RK Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases and c-Jun N-Terminal Kinases Are Activated by Ischemia/Reperfusion

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Judith Gillespie-Brown;Albert J. Ketterman;Stephen J. Fuller

  • Uses for JNK: the Many and Varied Substrates of the c-Jun N-Terminal Kinases

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Bostjan Kobe

  • Endothelin-1 and fibroblast growth factors stimulate the mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling cascade in cardiac myocytes. The potential role of the cascade in the integration of two signaling pathways leading to myocyte hypertrophy.

    M A Bogoyevitch;P E Glennon;M B Andersson;Angela Clerk

  • JNK Signaling: Regulation and Functions Based on Complex Protein-Protein Partnerships

    András Zeke;Mariya Misheva;Attila Reményi;Marie A. Bogoyevitch

  • c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling: Recent advances and challenges

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Kevin R.W. Ngoei;Teresa T. Zhao;Yvonne Y.C. Yeap

  • Differential activation of protein kinase C isoforms by endothelin-1 and phenylephrine and subsequent stimulation of p42 and p44 mitogen-activated protein kinases in ventricular myocytes cultured from neonatal rat hearts.

    Angela Clerk;M A Bogoyevitch;M B Anderson;P H Sugden

  • The c-Jun N-terminal protein kinase family of mitogen-activated protein kinases (JNK MAPKs).

    Renae K. Barr;Marie A. Bogoyevitch

  • Characterization of protein kinase C isotype expression in adult rat heart. Protein kinase C-epsilon is a major isotype present, and it is activated by phorbol esters, epinephrine, and endothelin.

    M A Bogoyevitch;P J Parker;P H Sugden

  • Targeting the JNK MAPK cascade for inhibition: basic science and therapeutic potential

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Ingrid Boehm;Aaron Oakley;Albert J. Ketterman

  • The Role of Stem Cells in Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle Repair

    Miranda D. Grounds;Jason D. White;Nadia Rosenthal;Marie A. Bogoyevitch

  • The broad spectrum antiviral ivermectin targets the host nuclear transport importin α/β1 heterodimer

    Sundy N.Y. Yang;Sarah C. Atkinson;Chunxiao Wang;Alexander Lee

  • Identification of the critical features of a small peptide inhibitor of JNK activity.

    Renae K. Barr;Tulene S. Kendrick;Marie A. Bogoyevitch

  • Cellular Stresses Differentially Activate c-Jun N-terminal Protein Kinases and Extracellular Signal-regulated Protein Kinases in Cultured Ventricular Myocytes

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Albert J. Ketterman;Peter H. Sugden

  • Hypertrophic Agonists Stimulate the Activities of the Protein Kinases c-Raf and A-Raf in Cultured Ventricular Myocytes

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Christopher J. Marshall;Peter H. Sugden

  • The isoform‐specific functions of the c‐Jun N‐terminal Kinases (JNKs): differences revealed by gene targeting

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch

  • A new paradigm for protein kinase inhibition: blocking phosphorylation without directly targeting ATP binding

    Marie A Bogoyevitch;David P Fairlie

  • An update on the cardiac effects of erythropoietin cardioprotection by erythropoietin and the lessons learnt from studies in neuroprotection

    Marie A Bogoyevitch

  • Adrenergic receptor stimulation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade and cardiac hypertrophy.

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Monica B. Andersson;Judith Gillespie-Brown;Angela Clerk

  • Endothelin-1, phorbol esters and phenylephrine stimulate MAP kinase activities in ventricular cardiomyocytes.

    Marie A. Bogoyevitch;Peter E. Glennon;Peter H. Sugden

  • Intracellular signalling through protein kinases in the heart.

    Peter H. Sugden;Marie A. Bogoyevitch

Frequent Co-Authors

David A. Jans
David A. Jans Monash University
Peter H. Sugden
Peter H. Sugden University of Reading
Angela Clerk
Angela Clerk University of Reading
Peter J. Parker
Peter J. Parker The Francis Crick Institute
Christopher Semsarian
Christopher Semsarian University of Sydney
Christopher J. Marshall
Christopher J. Marshall Institute of Cancer Research
Mark A. Febbraio
Mark A. Febbraio Monash University
Katharina Gaus
Katharina Gaus University of New South Wales
Cristobal G. dos Remedios
Cristobal G. dos Remedios Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute
Nadia Rosenthal
Nadia Rosenthal National Institutes of Health

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