Kirsten Clement
Researcher
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
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Research Areas
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Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Kirsten Clement's research investigates the physiological and molecular responses to environmental stressors, including simulated microgravity and galactic cosmic radiation, particularly focusing on long-term effects on the mammalian lung and potential sex-specific epigenetic reprogramming. Her work also explores the pharmacological and toxicological properties of cannabis-derived compounds, utilizing in vitro models such as human quad liver-on-chip systems to bridge the gap between animal studies and human relevance. Clement has examined inter-strain variability in animal responses to cannabidiol-rich cannabis extracts and investigated the role of methylsulfonylmethane as a methyl group donor for DNA methylation in human liver cells.
Her scholarly output includes four publications, with a total of five citations and an h-index of one. Clement collaborates with several researchers at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, including Igor Koturbash, Mitchell R. McGill, Charles M. Quick, and Eric U. Yee, with whom she shares multiple publications.
Metrics
- h-index: 1
- Publications: 4
- Citations: 5
Selected Publications
- Long-term effects of combined exposures to simulated microgravity and galactic cosmic radiation on the mouse lung: sex-specific epigenetic reprogramming (2025) DOI
- Human quad liver-on-chip system as a tool toward bridging the gap between animals and humans regarding toxicology and pharmacology of a cannabidiol-rich cannabis extract (2024) DOI
- Inter-strain variability in responses to a single administration of the cannabidiol-rich cannabis extract in mice (2024) DOI
- Methylsulfonylmethane Serves as a Donor of Methyl Groups for Methylation of DNA in Human Liver HepaRG Cells (2022) DOI
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