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D-Index & Metrics

Immunology

D-Index
67
Citations
14365
World Ranking
2688
National Ranking
26

Overview

Trevor Owens is affiliated with the University of Southern Denmark in Denmark. Their research spans multiple disciplines, primarily focusing on medicine, neuroscience, and immunology and microbiology. They have contributed to 19 publications in medicine, 18 in neuroscience, and 13 in immunology and microbiology, demonstrating a multidisciplinary approach to their work.

Their research subfields include neurology, immunology, pathology and forensic medicine, oncology, and molecular biology. Specifically, they have published work in neurology and immunology, with 13 publications each, as well as contributions in pathology and forensic medicine (8 publications), oncology (4 publications), and molecular biology (4 publications).

Owens' research topics cover mechanisms of neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, multiple sclerosis studies, and immune response and inflammation. Other areas of focus include cytokine signaling pathways, immune cells in cancer, neurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanisms, and interferon and immune responses. The number of publications in these research topics ranges from 6 to 22, indicating a significant engagement with these themes.

They have frequently published in the following journals:

  • Scandinavian Journal of Immunology
  • Glia
  • International Journal of Molecular Sciences
  • Frontiers in Immunology
  • Frontiers in Neuroscience

Recent notable papers include:

  • Protective Microglial Subset in Development, Aging, and Disease: Lessons From Transcriptomic Studies, 2020, Frontiers in Immunology
  • Microglia-Secreted Factors Enhance Dopaminergic Differentiation of Tissue- and iPSC-Derived Human Neural Stem Cells, 2021, Stem Cell Reports
  • Absence of miRNA-146a Differentially Alters Microglia Function and Proteome, 2020, Frontiers in Immunology
  • Protective roles for myeloid cells in neuroinflammation, 2020, Scandinavian Journal of Immunology
  • Type I interferon-activated microglia are critical for neuromyelitis optica pathology, 2020, Glia

Owens collaborates regularly with a number of researchers, including Reza Khorooshi, Agnieszka Włodarczyk, Joanna Marczynska, Magdalena Dubik, and Nasrin Asgari. The collaboration counts range from 6 to 15 joint publications, reflecting sustained scientific partnerships.

Best Publications

  • Interferon-gamma confers resistance to experimental allergic encephalomyelitis

    Michelle Krakowski;Trevor Owens

  • Chemokine Expression by Glial Cells Directs Leukocytes to Sites of Axonal Injury in the CNS

    Alicia A. Babcock;William A. Kuziel;Serge Rivest;Trevor Owens

  • TNF-alpha expression by resident microglia and infiltrating leukocytes in the central nervous system of mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. Regulation by Th1 cytokines.

    T. Renno;M. Krakowski;C. Piccirillo;Jia-You Lin

  • A novel microglial subset plays a key role in myelinogenesis in developing brain

    Agnieszka Wlodarczyk;Inge R. Holtman;Martin Krueger;Nir Yogev

  • Immune Invasion of the Central Nervous System Parenchyma and Experimental Allergic Encephalomyelitis, But Not Leukocyte Extravasation from Blood, Are Prevented in Macrophage-Depleted Mice

    E H Tran;K Hoekstra;N van Rooijen;C D Dijkstra

  • IFN-gamma shapes immune invasion of the central nervous system via regulation of chemokines.

    Elise H. Tran;Esther N. Prince;Trevor Owens

  • Perivascular Spaces and the Two Steps to Neuroinflammation

    Trevor Owens;Ingo Bechmann;Britta Engelhardt

  • PK11195 binding to the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor as a marker of microglia activation in multiple sclerosis and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis.

    Erika Vowinckel;David Reutens;Burkhard Becher;Gail Verge

  • Microglial recruitment, activation, and proliferation in response to primary demyelination.

    Leah T. Remington;Alicia A. Babcock;Alicia A. Babcock;Simone P. Zehntner;Trevor Owens;Trevor Owens

  • INFLAMMATORY CYTOKINES IN THE BRAIN : DOES THE CNS SHAPE IMMUNE RESPONSES ?

    Trevor Owens;Toufic Renno;Véronique Taupin;Michelle Krakowski

  • Genetic models for CNS inflammation

    Trevor Owens;Hartmut Wekerle;Jack Antel

  • Induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in C57BL/6 mice deficient in either the chemokine macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha or its CCR5 receptor.

    Elise H. Tran;William A. Kuziel;Trevor Owens

  • Toll-like receptor 2 signaling in response to brain injury: an innate bridge to neuroinflammation.

    Alicia A Babcock;Martin Wirenfeldt;Thomas Holm;Helle H Nielsen

  • The Immunology of Multiple Sclerosis and its Animal Model, Experimental Allergic Encephalomyelitis

    Trevor Owens;Subramaniam Sriram

  • IFN-γ enhances neurogenesis in wild-type mice and in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease

    Rona Baron;Anna Nemirovsky;Idan Harpaz;Hagit Cohen

  • Astrogliosis in the neonatal and adult murine brain post-trauma: elevation of inflammatory cytokines and the lack of requirement for endogenous interferon-gamma.

    Maria Rostworowski;Vijayabalan Balasingam;Sophie Chabot;Sophie Chabot;Trevor Owens

  • Increased severity of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, chronic macrophage/microglial reactivity, and demyelination in transgenic mice producing tumor necrosis factor-alpha in the central nervous system.

    Véronique Taupin;Toufic Renno;Lyne Bourbonnière;Alan C. Peterson

  • Aβ-induced meningoencephalitis is IFN-γ-dependent and is associated with T cell-dependent clearance of Aβ in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease

    Alon Monsonego;Jaime Imitola;Sanja Petrovic;Victor Zota

  • Astrocytes and microglia express inducible nitric oxide synthase in mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis.

    Elise H. Tran;Elise H. Tran;Hélène Hardin-Pouzet;Gail Verge;Trevor Owens;Trevor Owens

  • Key Metalloproteinases Are Expressed by Specific Cell Types in Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis

    Henrik Toft-Hansen;Robert K. Nuttall;Dylan R. Edwards;Trevor Owens

Frequent Co-Authors

Jack P. Antel
Jack P. Antel McGill University
Burkhard Becher
Burkhard Becher University of Zurich
Nico van Rooijen
Nico van Rooijen Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Siegfried Weiss
Siegfried Weiss Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research
Erik Boddeke
Erik Boddeke University Medical Center Groningen
Robert Sladek
Robert Sladek McGill University
Voon Wee Yong
Voon Wee Yong University of Calgary
Joseph A. Mancini
Joseph A. Mancini MSD (United States)
Bart J. L. Eggen
Bart J. L. Eggen University Medical Center Groningen
Thomas J. Hudson
Thomas J. Hudson Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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