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G Steinberg

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Articles 88
Citations 1485
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Recent Articles
1.
Catto J, Tran B, Roupret M, Gschwend J, Loriot Y, Nishiyama H, et al.
Ann Oncol . 2023 Oct; 35(1):98-106. PMID: 37871701
Background: Treatment options are limited for patients with high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) with disease recurrence after bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) treatment and who are ineligible for/refuse radical cystectomy. FGFR alterations...
2.
Wu L, Zhang Y, Steinberg G, Qu H, Huang S, Cheng M, et al.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol . 2019 Jan; 40(2):206-212. PMID: 30655254
Magnetic particle imaging is an emerging tomographic technique with the potential for simultaneous high-resolution, high-sensitivity, and real-time imaging. Magnetic particle imaging is based on the unique behavior of superparamagnetic iron...
3.
Kilaru S, Schuster M, Ma W, Steinberg G
Fungal Genet Biol . 2017 Jun; 105:16-27. PMID: 28579390
Development of novel strategies to control fungal plant pathogens requires understanding of their cellular organisation and biology. Live cell imaging of fluorescent organelle markers has provided valuable insight into various...
4.
Kilaru S, Ma W, Schuster M, Courbot M, Steinberg G
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:166-73. PMID: 26092803
Development of new fungicides, needed for sustainable control of fungal plant pathogens, requires identification of novel anti-fungal targets. Essential fungal-specific proteins are good candidates, but due to their importance, gene...
5.
Guo M, Kilaru S, Schuster M, Latz M, Steinberg G
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:158-65. PMID: 26092802
Fungal hyphae are highly polarized cells that invade their substrate by tip growth. In plant pathogenic fungi, hyphal growth is essential for host invasion. This makes polarity factors and secretion...
6.
Kilaru S, Schuster M, Latz M, Guo M, Steinberg G
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:150-7. PMID: 26092801
Hyphal growth in filamentous fungi is supported by the uptake (endocytosis) and recycling of membranes and associated proteins at the growing tip. An increasing body of published evidence in various...
7.
Schuster M, Kilaru S, Guo M, Sommerauer M, Lin C, Steinberg G
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:132-40. PMID: 26092800
The use of fluorescent proteins (FPs) in plant pathogenic fungi provides valuable insight into their intracellular dynamics, cell organization and invasion mechanisms. Compared with green-fluorescent proteins, their red-fluorescent "cousins" show...
8.
Kilaru S, Schuster M, Studholme D, Soanes D, Lin C, Talbot N, et al.
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:125-31. PMID: 26092799
Fluorescent proteins (FPs) are powerful tools to investigate intracellular dynamics and protein localization. Cytoplasmic expression of FPs in fungal pathogens allows greater insight into invasion strategies and the host-pathogen interaction....
9.
Kilaru S, Schuster M, Latz M, Das Gupta S, Steinberg N, Fones H, et al.
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:118-24. PMID: 26092798
Understanding the cellular organization and biology of fungal pathogens requires accurate methods for genomic integration of mutant alleles or fluorescent fusion-protein constructs. In Zymoseptoria tritici, this can be achieved by...
10.
Ma W, Kilaru S, Collins C, Courbot M, Steinberg G
Fungal Genet Biol . 2015 Jun; 79:94-101. PMID: 26092795
Pathogenic fungi are constantly emerging resistance to anti-fungal treatments. Therefore, identification of new fungicide targets is important. Good candidates are essential fungal proteins and their regulators. An efficient way to...