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D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
58
Citations
13815
World Ranking
13072
National Ranking
5573

Overview

Raymond W. Tennant is affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. Their professional background is rooted in this prominent biomedical research organization, which is a key institution in advancing health and medical knowledge.

While there are no specific records of recent papers, co-authors, book publications, or detailed main fields of study available for this scientist, their connection to the National Institutes of Health suggests involvement in health-related research domains.

No information is available regarding particular areas of specialization, subfields, or main research topics attributed to Raymond W. Tennant. Similarly, no details about frequent publication venues or awards won have been recorded.

As an active researcher associated with a leading public health institution, their work may contribute to ongoing scientific efforts in biomedical research, though specific details about their scholarly output or collaborations are not provided in the current data.

Best Publications

  • Prediction of chemical carcinogenicity in rodents from in vitro genetic toxicity assays.

    Raymond W. Tennant;Barry H. Margolin;Michael D. Shelby;Errol Zeiger

  • Chemical structure, Salmonella mutagenicity and extent of carcinogenicity as indicators of genotoxic carcinogenesis among 222 chemicals tested in rodents by the U.S. NCI/NTP.

    John Ashby;Raymond W. Tennant

  • Definitive relationships among chemical structure, carcinogenicity and mutagenicity for 301 chemicals tested by the U.S. NTP.

    John Ashby;Raymond W. Tennant

  • Enrichment for living murine keratinocytes from the hair follicle bulge with the cell surface marker CD34.

    Carol S Trempus;Rebecca J Morris;Carl D Bortner;George Cotsarelis

  • Gene expression analysis reveals chemical-specific profiles.

    Hisham K. Hamadeh;Pierre R. Bushel;Supriya Jayadev;Karla Martin

  • Reduced skin tumor development in cyclin D1-deficient mice highlights the oncogenic ras pathway in vivo

    Ana I. Robles;Marcelo L. Rodriguez-Puebla;Adam B. Glick;Carol Trempus

  • Prediction of compound signature using high density gene expression profiling

    Hisham K. Hamadeh;Pierre R. Bushel;Supriya Jayadev;Olimpia DiSorbo

  • Classification according to chemical structure, mutagenicity to Salmonella and level of carcinogenicity of a further 39 chemicals tested for carcinogenicity by the U.S. National Toxicology Program.

    Raymond W. Tennant;John Ashby

  • Identification of putative gene based markers of renal toxicity.

    Rupesh P. Amin;Alison E. Vickers;Frank Sistare;Karol L. Thompson

  • Evaluation of four in vitro genetic toxicity tests for predicting rodent carcinogenicity: Confirmation of earlier results with 41 additional chemicals

    Errol Zeiger;Joseph K. Haseman;Michael D. Shelby;Barry H. Margolin

  • Identifying chemical carcinogens and assessing potential risk in short-term bioassays using transgenic mouse models.

    Raymond W. Tennant;John E. French;Judson W. Spalding

  • Gene expression profiling of rat livers reveals indicators of potential adverse effects.

    Alexandra N. Heinloth;Richard D. Irwin;Gary A. Boorman;Paul Nettesheim

  • Systems toxicology and the Chemical Effects in Biological Systems (CEBS) knowledge base.

    Michael Waters;Gary Boorman;Pierre Bushel;Michael Cunningham

  • Mouse population-guided resequencing reveals that variants in CD44 contribute to acetaminophen-induced liver injury in humans

    Alison H. Harrill;Paul B. Watkins;Stephen Su;Pamela K. Ross

  • Arsenic can mediate skin neoplasia by chronic stimulation of keratinocyte-derived growth factors

    Dori R Germolec;Judson Spalding;Gary A Boorman;James L Wilmer

  • CD34 Expression by Hair Follicle Stem Cells Is Required for Skin Tumor Development in Mice

    Carol S. Trempus;Rebecca J. Morris;Matthew Ehinger;Amy Elmore

  • Chemically induced skin carcinogenesis in a transgenic mouse line (TG·AC) carrying a v-Ha-ras gene

    Judson W. Spalding;Junko Momma;Michael R. Elwell;Raymond W. Tennant

  • Chemical carcinogens. A review and analysis of the literature of selected chemicals and the establishment of the Gene-Tox Carcinogen Data Base. A report of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Gene-Tox Program.

    S. Nesnow;M. Argus;H. Bergman;K. Chu

  • Evaluation of transgenic mouse bioassays for identifying carcinogens and noncarcinogens

    Raymond W. Tennant;Judson Spalding;John E. French

  • CEBS—Chemical Effects in Biological Systems: a public data repository integrating study design and toxicity data with microarray and proteomics data

    Michael D. Waters;Stanley Stasiewicz;B. Alex Merrick;Kenneth B. Tomer

Frequent Co-Authors

Richard S. Paules
Richard S. Paules National Institutes of Health
Pierre R. Bushel
Pierre R. Bushel National Institutes of Health
Benjamin F. Trump
Benjamin F. Trump University of Maryland, Baltimore
Carl D. Bortner
Carl D. Bortner National Institutes of Health
Curtis C. Harris
Curtis C. Harris National Institutes of Health
Raymond R. Tice
Raymond R. Tice National Institutes of Health
Joseph K. Haseman
Joseph K. Haseman National Institutes of Health
Michael D. Shelby
Michael D. Shelby National Institutes of Health
Thomas J. Slaga
Thomas J. Slaga The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
John Ashby
John Ashby Syngenta (Switzerland)

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