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Medicine

D-Index
73
Citations
18287
World Ranking
19670
National Ranking
9797

Research.com Recognitions

  • 1964 - Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Overview

Paul S. Russell is affiliated with Harvard University in the United States. Their research spans multiple areas within medicine and immunology, with a focus on transplantation and immune cell function. The main fields of study they contribute to are Medicine and Immunology and Microbiology. Within these broader fields, their subfields of study include Immunology, Transplantation, Surgery, Nephrology, and Epidemiology.

The topics central to Russell's work include:

  • Renal Transplantation Outcomes and Treatments
  • Immune Cell Function and Interaction
  • T-cell and B-cell Immunology
  • Sepsis Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes
  • S100 Proteins and Annexins
  • Adenosine and Purinergic Signaling

Russell has published research in several notable venues, including:

  • American Journal of Transplantation
  • Intensive Care Medicine
  • JCI Insight
  • Journal of Clinical Investigation
  • Heliyon

Significant recent publications include:

  • "Presymptomatic diagnosis of postoperative infection and sepsis using gene expression signatures," 2022, Intensive Care Medicine
  • "Novel intragraft regulatory lymphoid structures in kidney allograft tolerance," 2021, American Journal of Transplantation
  • "Kidney-induced systemic tolerance of heart allografts in mice," 2020, JCI Insight
  • "Intragraft B cell differentiation during the development of tolerance to kidney allografts is associated with a regulatory B cell signature revealed by single cell transcriptomics," 2023, American Journal of Transplantation
  • "Dysfunction of infiltrating cytotoxic CD8+ T cells within the graft promotes murine kidney allotransplant tolerance," 2024, Journal of Clinical Investigation

Key frequent coauthors in Russell's collaborative research network are:

  • Joren C. Madsen
  • Alessandro Alessandrini
  • Ivy A. Rosales
  • Robert B. Colvin
  • Edward S. Szuter

Paul S. Russell was named a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1964.

Best Publications

  • Primarily vascularized allografts of hearts in mice. The role of H-2D, H-2K, and non-H-2 antigens in rejection.

    Robert J. Corry;Henry J. Winn;Paul S. Russell

  • Use of Monoclonal Antibodies to T-Cell Subsets for Immunologic Monitoring and Treatment in Recipients of Renal Allografts

    A. Benedict Cosimi;Robert B. Colvin;Robert C. Burton;Robert H. Rubin

  • Transplantation of small bowel in the rat: technical and immunological considerations.

    G.J. Monchik;P.S. Russell

  • Widespread and selective induction of major histocompatibility complex-determined antigens in vivo by gamma interferon.

    M J Skoskiewicz;R B Colvin;E E Schneeberger;P S Russell

  • TREATMENT OF ACUTE RENAL ALLOGRAFT REJECTION WITH OKT3 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY

    A. Cosimi;Robert Burton;Robert Colvin;Gideon Goldstein

  • Controlled clinical trial of prophylactic human-leukocyte interferon in renal transplantation. Effects on cytomegalovirus and herpes simplex virus infections.

    Cheeseman Sh;Rubin Rh;Stewart Ja;Tolkoff-Rubin Ne

  • Glomerulopathy Associated With Cytomegalovirus Viremia in Renal Allografts

    W.P. Richardson;R.B. Colvin;S.H. Cheeseman;N.E. Tolkoff-Rubin

  • Coronary atherosclerosis in transplanted mouse hearts. II. Importance of humoral immunity.

    P S Russell;C M Chase;H J Winn;R B Colvin

  • Contribution of BRCA1 Mutations to Ovarian Cancer

    John F. Stratton;Simon A. Gayther;Paul Russell;Jo Dearden

  • Monoclonal antibody therapy. Anti-idiotypic and non-anti-idiotypic antibodies to OKT3 arising despite intense immunosuppression.

    Gregory Jaffers;Thomas Fuller;A. Cosimi;Paul Russell

  • Studies on heterologous anti-lymphocyte serum in mice. I. In vitro and in vivo properties.

    J. G. Gray;Anthony P. Monaco;Mary L. Wood;Paul S. Russell

  • Humoral antibodies in renal allotransplantation in man.

    M Jeannet;V W Pinn;M H Flax;H J Winn

  • Xenogeneic skin graft rejection is especially dependent on CD4+ T cells.

    R N Pierson;H J Winn;P S Russell;H Auchincloss

  • A Novel Pathway of Chronic Allograft Rejection Mediated by NK Cells and Alloantibody

    T. Hirohashi;C. M. Chase;P. Della Pelle;D. Sebastian

  • Studies on heterologous anti-lymphocyte serum in mice. II. Effect on the immune response.

    Anthony P. Monaco;Mary L. Wood;J. G. Gray;Paul S. Russell

  • Activation of bone marrow–resident memory T cells by circulating, antigen-bearing dendritic cells

    Lois L Cavanagh;Roberto Bonasio;Irina B Mazo;Cornelia Halin

  • Infectious disease syndromes attributable to cytomegalovirus and their significance among renal transplant recipients.

    Robert Rubin;A. Cosimi;Nina Tolkoff-Rubin;Paul Russell

  • Association of herpesvirus infections with T-lymphocyte-subset alterations, glomerulopathy, and opportunistic infections after renal transplantation.

    R T Schooley;M S Hirsch;R B Colvin;A B Cosimi

  • Implantation of genetically engineered fibroblasts into mice: implications for gene therapy.

    Richard F. Selden;Marek J. Skoskiewicz;Kathleen Burke Howie;Paul S. Russell

  • NK Cells Can Trigger Allograft Vasculopathy: The Role of Hybrid Resistance in Solid Organ Allografts

    Shuichiro Uehara;Catharine M. Chase;William H. Kitchens;Harris S. Rose

Frequent Co-Authors

Robert B. Colvin
Robert B. Colvin Harvard University
Cosimi Ab
Cosimi Ab Harvard University
Francis L. Delmonico
Francis L. Delmonico Harvard University
Robert H. Rubin
Robert H. Rubin Brigham and Women's Hospital
Nina Tolkoff-Rubin
Nina Tolkoff-Rubin Harvard University
Anthony P. Monaco
Anthony P. Monaco Tufts University
Richard L. Simmons
Richard L. Simmons University of Pittsburgh
Hugh Auchincloss
Hugh Auchincloss National Institutes of Health
David H. Sachs
David H. Sachs Columbia University
Martin S. Hirsch
Martin S. Hirsch Harvard Medical School

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