Gabriel J Starrett
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Explore the profile of Gabriel J Starrett including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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46
Citations
2164
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Recent Articles
1.
Starrett G, Baikie B, Stoff B, Grossniklaus H, Van Buren I, Berry E, et al.
Clin Cancer Res
. 2024 Sep;
30(21):4887-4899.
PMID: 39287419
Purpose: Sebaceous carcinoma is the third most common nonkeratinocyte skin cancer in the United States with 1,000 cases per year. The clinicopathologic features of sebaceous carcinoma and benign sebaceous neoplasms...
2.
Zamuner F, Gunti S, Starrett G, Faraji F, Toni T, Saraswathula A, et al.
bioRxiv
. 2024 Jul;
PMID: 38979305
One Sentence Summary: This study solidifies HPV as a driver of HPV-associated SNSCC tumorigenesis, identifies molecular mechanisms distinguishing HPV-associated and HPV-independent SNSCC, and elucidates YAP/TAZ and PI3K blockade as key...
3.
Chatterjee S, Starrett G
J Med Virol
. 2024 May;
96(5):e29674.
PMID: 38757834
Human Papillomaviruses (HPV) are a diverse family of non-enveloped dsDNA viruses that infect the skin and mucosal epithelia. Persistent HPV infections can lead to cancer frequently involving integration of the...
4.
Buck C, Welch N, Belford A, Varsani A, Pastrana D, Tisza M, et al.
bioRxiv
. 2024 May;
PMID: 38712252
The initial objective of this study was to shed light on the evolution of small DNA tumor viruses by analyzing assemblies of publicly available deep sequencing datasets. The survey generated...
5.
Carpenter M, Temiz N, Ibrahim M, Jarvis M, Brown M, Argyris P, et al.
PLoS Genet
. 2023 Nov;
19(11):e1011043.
PMID: 38033156
A prominent source of mutation in cancer is single-stranded DNA cytosine deamination by cellular APOBEC3 enzymes, which results in signature C-to-T and C-to-G mutations in TCA and TCT motifs. Although...
6.
Starrett G, Foster H, Sigel K, Liu Y, Engels E
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
. 2023 Oct;
94(4):337-340.
PMID: 37884054
Background: People living with HIV (PLWH) have elevated risk for developing virus-related cancers. Bladder cancer risk is not increased in PLWH but is elevated among immunosuppressed solid organ transplant recipients...
7.
Analysis of Several Common APOBEC-type Mutations in Bladder Tumors Suggests Links to Viral Infection
Rao N, Starrett G, Piaskowski M, Butler K, Golubeva Y, Yan W, et al.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila)
. 2023 Jul;
16(10):561-570.
PMID: 37477495
Prevention Relevance: Tobacco smoking likely causes one of the most common mutations in bladder tumors (FGFR3-Y375C), while viral infections might contribute to three others (FGFR3-S249C, PIK3CA-E542K, and PIK3CA-E545K). Understanding the...
8.
Starrett G, Yu K, Golubeva Y, Lenz P, Piaskowski M, Petersen D, et al.
Elife
. 2023 Mar;
12.
PMID: 36961501
A small percentage of bladder cancers in the general population have been found to harbor DNA viruses. In contrast, up to 25% of tumors of solid organ transplant recipients, who...
9.
Starrett G, Lee J, Chatterjee S, Jedrych J
Br J Dermatol
. 2023 Feb;
188(5):675-677.
PMID: 36763778
No abstract available.
10.
Starrett G, Schiller J, Lowy D
Cancer Discov
. 2023 Jan;
13(1):17-18.
PMID: 36620882
Chronic infection by several "high-risk" human papillomavirus (HPV) types has been causally implicated in several forms of anogenital and oropharyngeal cancers. Now, HPV42, which is usually classified as a "low-risk"...