Robert R Bowers
Overview
Explore the profile of Robert R Bowers including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
23
Citations
688
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Bowers R, Slonecki T, Olukolu B, Yencho G, Wadl P
Int J Mol Sci
. 2024 Nov;
25(21).
PMID: 39519288
Sweet potato () is an important food crop that plays a pivotal role in preserving worldwide food security. Due to its polyploid genome, high heterogeneity, and phenotypic plasticity, sweet potato...
2.
Blackman A, Rees A, Bowers R, Jones C, Vaena S, Clark M, et al.
Cancer Res Commun
. 2024 Sep;
4(9):2525-2538.
PMID: 39225558
Significance: Mouse models using transgenes which generate spontaneous cancers are essential tools to examine the etiology of human diseases. Here, the first Myc-driven spontaneous model is described as a valid...
3.
Blackman A, Rees A, Bowers R, Jones C, Vaena S, Clark M, et al.
bioRxiv
. 2024 Feb;
PMID: 38352443
Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMM) have fundamentally changed how ovarian cancer etiology, early detection, and treatment is understood. However, previous GEMMs of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) have had to...
4.
Bowers R, Andrade M, Jones C, White-Gilbertson S, Voelkel-Johnson C, Delaney J
BMC Cancer
. 2022 Apr;
22(1):410.
PMID: 35421971
Background: Genomic instability and chemoresistance can arise in cancer due to a unique form of plasticity: that of polyploid giant cancer cells (PGCCs). These cells form under the stress of...
5.
Bowers R, Jones C, Paz E, Barrows J, Armeson K, Long D, et al.
Nucleic Acids Res
. 2022 Apr;
50(7):3673-3692.
PMID: 35380699
Haploinsufficiency drives Darwinian evolution. Siblings, while alike in many aspects, differ due to monoallelic differences inherited from each parent. In cancer, solid tumors exhibit aneuploid genetics resulting in hundreds to...
6.
Kumar M, Bowers R, Delaney J
Cell Cycle
. 2020 Oct;
19(22):3154-3166.
PMID: 33121339
Unusually high aneuploidy is a hallmark of epithelial serous ovarian cancer (SOC). Previous analyses have focused on aneuploidy on average across all tumor cells. With the expansion of single-cell sequencing...
7.
Bowers R, Delaney J, Spyropoulos D
Trends Cancer
. 2020 Apr;
6(5):363-365.
PMID: 32348732
Mitigating inflammation is clearly important in cancer prevention and control. Traditionally, pharmaceuticals have taken the lead in this problem. In an attempt to 'head them off at the pass', this...
8.
Temkin A, Bowers R, Ulmer C, Penta K, Bowden J, Nyland J, et al.
Sci Rep
. 2019 Feb;
9(1):1530.
PMID: 30728429
Evidence indicates that obesity can be promoted by chemical 'obesogens' that drive adiposity, hunger, inflammation and suppress metabolism. Dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate (DOSS), a lipid emulsifier and candidate obesogen in vitro,...
9.
Bowers R, Temkin A, Guillette L, Baatz J, Spyropoulos D
Gen Comp Endocrinol
. 2016 May;
238:61-68.
PMID: 27131391
Obesity has reached pandemic proportions, and there is mounting evidence that environmental exposures to endocrine disrupting chemicals known as "obesogens" may contribute to obesity and associated medical conditions. The Deepwater...
10.
Temkin A, Bowers R, Magaletta M, Holshouser S, Maggi A, Ciana P, et al.
Environ Health Perspect
. 2015 Jul;
124(1):112-9.
PMID: 26135921
Background: The obesity pandemic is associated with multiple major health concerns. In addition to diet and lifestyle, there is increasing evidence that environmental exposures to chemicals known as obesogens also...