Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Alexia S. Terry's research investigates the interplay between gut microbiota, tumor vasculature, and therapeutic response in cancer. Her work has explored how dysbiotic stress can sensitize tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors, as demonstrated in a 2021 publication. This research involved studies in animal models, specifically mice, and examined the role of proto-oncogene proteins like c-met. Terry's work also touches upon the experimental pathology of melanoma and neovascularization. She has collaborated with researchers from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, including Ruud P.M. Dings, Alan J. Tackett, Stephanie D. Byrum, and Robert J. Griffin. Terry's scholarly output to date includes one publication with an h-index of 1 and a total of 4 citations.
Metrics
- h-index: 1
- Publications: 1
- Citations: 4
Selected Publications
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Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors (2021)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
- Dysbiotic stress increases the sensitivity of the tumor vasculature to radiotherapy and c-Met inhibitors
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