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Dive into the research topics where Valerie M. Harris is active.

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Featured researches published by Valerie M. Harris.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2016

X Chromosome Dose and Sex Bias in Autoimmune Diseases: Increased Prevalence of 47,XXX in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Sjögren's Syndrome.

Ke Liu; Biji T. Kurien; Sarah L. Zimmerman; Kenneth M. Kaufman; Diana H. Taft; Leah C. Kottyan; Sara Lazaro; Carrie A. Weaver; John A. Ice; Adam Adler; James Chodosh; Lida Radfar; Astrid Rasmussen; Donald U. Stone; David M. Lewis; Shibo Li; Kristi A. Koelsch; Ann Igoe; Mitali Talsania; Jay Kumar; Jacen S. Maier-Moore; Valerie M. Harris; Rajaram Gopalakrishnan; Roland Jonsson; James A. Lessard; Xianglan Lu; Jacques Eric Gottenberg; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham; Andrew J.W. Huang

More than 80% of autoimmune disease predominantly affects females, but the mechanism for this female bias is poorly understood. We suspected that an X chromosome dose effect accounts for this, and we undertook this study to test our hypothesis that trisomy X (47,XXX; occurring in ∼1 in 1,000 live female births) would be increased in patients with female‐predominant diseases (systemic lupus erythematosus [SLE], primary Sjögrens syndrome [SS], primary biliary cirrhosis, and rheumatoid arthritis [RA]) compared to patients with diseases without female predominance (sarcoidosis) and compared to controls.


Europace | 2017

Antiadrenergic autoimmunity in postural tachycardia syndrome

Artur Fedorowski; Hongliang Li; Xichun Yu; Kristi A. Koelsch; Valerie M. Harris; Campbell Liles; Taylor A. Murphy; Syed M. Quadri; Robert Hal Scofield; Richard Sutton; Olle Melander; David C. Kem

Abstract Aims Postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS), a common and debilitating cardiovascular disorder, is characterized by an exaggerated heart rate increase during orthostasis and a wide spectrum of adrenergic-related symptoms. To determine the aetiology of POTS, we examined a possible pathophysiological role for autoantibodies against α1-adrenergic (α1AR) and β1/2-adrenergic receptors (β1/2AR). Methods and results Immunoglobulin G (IgG) derived from 17 POTS patients, 7 with recurrent vasovagal syncope (VVS), and 11 normal controls was analysed for its ability to modulate activity and ligand responsiveness of α1AR and β1/2AR in transfected cells and to alter contractility of isolated rat cremaster arterioles in vitro. Immunoglobulin G activation of α1AR and β1/2AR was significantly higher in POTS compared with VVS and controls in cell-based assays. Eight, 11, and 12 of the 17 POTS patients possessed autoantibodies that activated α1AR, β1AR and β2AR, respectively. Pharmacological blockade suppressed IgG-induced activation of α1AR and β1/2AR. Eight of 17 POTS IgG decreased the α1AR responsiveness to phenylephrine and 13 of 17 POTS IgG increased the β1AR responsiveness to isoproterenol irrespective of their ability to directly activate their receptors. Postural tachycardia syndrome IgG contracted rat cremaster arterioles, which was reversed by α1AR blockade. The upright heart rate correlated with IgG-mediated β1AR and α1AR activity but not with β2AR activity. Conclusion These data confirm a strong relationship between adrenergic autoantibodies and POTS. They support the concept that allosteric-mediated shifts in the α1AR and β1AR responsiveness are important in the pathophysiology of postural tachycardia.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Protein Detection by Simple Western™ Analysis

Valerie M. Harris

Protein Simple© has taken a well-known protein detection method, the western blot, and revolutionized it. The Simple Western™ system uses capillary electrophoresis to identify and quantitate a protein of interest. Protein Simple© provides multiple detection apparatuses (Wes, Sally Sue, or Peggy Sue) that are suggested to save scientists valuable time by allowing the researcher to prepare the protein sample, load it along with necessary antibodies and substrates, and walk away. Within 3-5 h the protein will be separated by size, or charge, immuno-detection of target protein will be accurately quantitated, and results will be immediately made available. Using the Peggy Sue instrument, one study recently examined changes in MAPK signaling proteins in the sex-determining stage of gonadal development. Here the methodology is described.


Clinical Immunology | 2016

Klinefelter's syndrome (47,XXY) is in excess among men with Sjögren's syndrome

Valerie M. Harris; Rohan Sharma; Joshua Cavett; Biji T. Kurien; Ke Liu; Kristi A. Koelsch; Astrid Rasmussen; Lida Radfar; David M. Lewis; Donald U. Stone; C. Erick Kaufman; Shibo Li; Barbara M. Segal; Daniel J. Wallace; Michael H. Weisman; Swamy Venuturupalli; Jennifer A. Kelly; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Bernardo A. Pons-Estel; Roland Jonsson; Xianglan Lu; Jacques Eric Gottenberg; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham; Andrew J.W. Huang; Michael T. Brennan; Pamela Hughes; Ilias Alevizos; Corinne Miceli-Richard; Edward C. Keystone

Primary Sjögrens syndrome (pSS) has a strong female bias. We evaluated an X chromosome dose effect by analyzing 47,XXY (Klinefelters syndrome, 1 in 500 live male births) among subjects with pSS. 47,XXY was determined by examination of fluorescence intensity of single nucleotide polymorphisms from the X and Y chromosomes. Among 136 pSS men there were 4 with 47,XXY. This was significantly different from healthy controls (1 of 1254 had 47,XXY, p=0.0012 by Fishers exact test) as well men with rheumatoid arthritis (0 of 363 with 47,XXY), but not different compared to men with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) (4 of 136 versus 8 of 306, Fishers exact test p=NS). These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the number of X chromosomes is critical for the female bias of pSS, a property that may be shared with SLE but not RA.


Lupus science & medicine | 2015

Significantly reduced lymphadenopathy, salivary gland infiltrates and proteinuria in MRL-lpr/lpr mice treated with ultrasoluble curcumin/turmeric: increased survival with curcumin treatment

Biji T. Kurien; Valerie M. Harris; Syed M. Quadri; Patricia Coutinho-de Souza; Joshua Cavett; Amanda Moyer; Bilal Ittiq; Angela Metcalf; Husayn F Ramji; Dat Truong; Ramesh Kumar; Kristi A. Koelsch; Mike Centola; Adam Joshua Payne; Debashish Danda; R. Hal Scofield

Objectives Commercial curcumin (CU), derived from food spice turmeric (TU), has been widely studied as a potential therapeutic for a variety of oncological and inflammatory conditions. Lack of solubility/bioavailability has hindered curcumins therapeutic efficacy in human diseases. We have solubilised curcumin in water applying heat/pressure, obtaining up to 35-fold increase in solubility (ultrasoluble curcumin (UsC)). We hypothesised that UsC or ultrasoluble turmeric (UsT) will ameliorate systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and Sjögrens syndrome (SS)-like disease in MRL-lpr/lpr mice. Methods Eighteen female MRL-lpr/lpr (6 weeks old) and 18 female MRL-MpJ mice (6 weeks old) were used. Female MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop lupus-like disease at the 10th week and die at an average age of 17 weeks. MRL-MpJ mice develop lupus-like disease around 47 weeks and typically die at 73 weeks. Six mice of each strain received autoclaved water only (lpr-water or MpJ-water group), UsC (lpr-CU or MpJ-CU group) or UsT (lpr-TU or MpJ-TU group) in the water bottle. Results UsC or UsT ameliorates SLE in the MRL-lpr/lpr mice by significantly reducing lymphoproliferation, proteinuria, lesions (tail) and autoantibodies. lpr-CU group had a 20% survival advantage over lpr-water group. However, lpr-TU group lived an average of 16 days shorter than lpr-water group due to complications unrelated to lupus-like illness. CU/TU treatment inhibited lymphadenopathy significantly compared with lpr-water group (p=0.03 and p=0.02, respectively) by induction of apoptosis. Average lymph node weights were 2606±1147, 742±331 and 385±68 mg, respectively, for lpr-water, lpr-CU and lpr-TU mice. Transferase dUTP nick end labelling assay showed that lymphocytes in lymph nodes of lpr-CU and lpr-TU mice underwent apoptosis. Significantly reduced cellular infiltration of the salivary glands in the lpr-TU group compared with the lpr-water group, and a trend towards reduced kidney damage was observed in the lpr-CU and lpr-TU groups. Conclusions These studies show that UsC/UsT could prove useful as a therapeutic intervention in SLE/SS.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2015

X Chromosome Dose and Sex Bias in Autoimmune Diseases: Increased 47,XXX in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Sjögren's Syndrome

Ke Liu; Biji T. Kurien; Sarah L. Zimmerman; Kenneth M. Kaufman; Diana H. Taft; Leah C. Kottyan; Sara Lazaro; Carrie A. Weaver; John A. Ice; Adam Adler; James Chodosh; Lida Radfar; Astrid Rasmussen; Donald U. Stone; David M. Lewis; Shibo Li; Kristi A. Koelsch; Ann Igoe; Mitali Talsania; Jay Kumar; Jacen S. Maier-Moore; Valerie M. Harris; Rajaram Gopalakrishnan; Roland Jonsson; James A. Lessard; Xianglan Lu; Jacques-Eric Gottenberg; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham; Andrew J.W. Huang

More than 80% of autoimmune disease predominantly affects females, but the mechanism for this female bias is poorly understood. We suspected that an X chromosome dose effect accounts for this, and we undertook this study to test our hypothesis that trisomy X (47,XXX; occurring in ∼1 in 1,000 live female births) would be increased in patients with female‐predominant diseases (systemic lupus erythematosus [SLE], primary Sjögrens syndrome [SS], primary biliary cirrhosis, and rheumatoid arthritis [RA]) compared to patients with diseases without female predominance (sarcoidosis) and compared to controls.


Lupus science & medicine | 2017

313 Very rare x chromosome aneuploidies in lupus and sjogren’s

H Scofield; Rohan Sharma; Valerie M. Harris; Joshua Cavett; John B. Harley; Biji T. Kurien; Astrid Rasmussen; Kathy Moser Sivils

Background and aims Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and Sjögren’s syndrome are related by clinical and serological manifestations as well as genetic risks. Both diseases are more commonly found in women compared to men at a ratio of about 10 to 1. Common X chromosome aneuploidies, 47,XXY and 47,XXX, are enriched among men and women, respectively, in either disease suggesting a dose effect on the X chromosome. Methods We examined cohorts of Sjögren’s syndrome or SLE patients with intensity plots of X chromosome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) alleles along with karyotype of selected subjects. Results Among ˜2500 women with SLE we found three patients with a triple mosaic consisting of 45,X/46,XX/47,XXX. Among ˜2100 women with Sjögren’s syndrome, one patient had 45,X/46,XX/47,XXX with a triplication of the distal p arm of the X chromosome in the 47,XXX cells. Neither the triple mosaic nor the partial triplication were found among controls. In another Sjögren’s cohort, we found a mother-daughter pair with partial triplication of this same region of the X chromosome. The triple mosaic occurs in approximately 1 in 25 000 to 50 000 live female births, while partial triplications such are even rarer. Conclusions Very rare X chromosome abnormalities are present among patients with either Sjögren’s or SLE, and may inform the location of a gene(s) that mediate an X dose effect as well as critical cell types in which such effect is operative.


Clinical Immunology | 2017

Corrigendum to “Klinefelter's syndrome (47,XXY) is in excess among men with Sjögren's syndrome” [Clin. Immunol. 168 (2016) 25–29](S1521661616300614)(10.1016/j.clim.2016.04.002)

Valerie M. Harris; Rohan Sharma; Joshua Cavett; Biji T. Kurien; Ke Liu; Kristi A. Koelsch; Astrid Rasmussen; Lida Radfar; David M. Lewis; Donald U. Stone; C. Erick Kaufman; Shibo Li; Barbara M. Segal; Daniel J. Wallace; Michael H. Weisman; Swamy Venuturupalli; Jennifer A. Kelly; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Bernardo A. Pons-Estel; Roland Jonsson; Xianglan Lu; Jacques Eric Gottenberg; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham; Andrew J.W. Huang; Michael T. Brennan; Pamela Hughes; Ilias Alevizos; Corinne Miceli-Richard; Edward C. Keystone

Valerie M. Harris , Rohan Sharma , Joshua Cavett , Biji T. Kurien , Ke Liu , Kristi A. Koelsch , Astrid Rasmussen , Lida Radfar , David Lewis , Donald U. Stone , C. Erick Kaufman , Shibo Li , Barbara Segal , Daniel J. Wallace , Michael H. Weisman , Swamy Venuturupalli , Jennifer A. Kelly , Marta E. Alarcon-Riquelme , Bernardo Pons-Estel , Roland Jonsson , Xianglan Lu , Jacques-Eric Gottenberg , Juan-Manuel Anaya , Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham , Andrew J.W. Huang , Michael T. Brennan , Pamela Hughes , Ilias Alevizos , Corinne Miceli-Richard , Edward C. Keystone , Vivian P. Bykerk , Gideon Hirschfield , Gang Xie , Katherine A. Siminovitch , Wan-Fai Ng , Gunnel Nordmark , Sara Magnusson Bucher , Per Eriksson , Roald Omdal , Nelson L. Rhodus , Maureen Rischmueller , Michael Rohrer , Marie Wahren-Herlenius , Torsten Witte , Xavier Mariette , Christopher J. Lessard , John B. Harley , Kathy L. Sivils , R. Hal Scofield a,b,c,d,⁎


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2016

X Chromosome Dose and Sex Bias in Autoimmune Diseases

Ke Liu; Biji T. Kurien; Sarah L. Zimmerman; Kenneth M. Kaufman; Diana H. Taft; Leah C. Kottyan; Sara Lazaro; Carrie A. Weaver; John A. Ice; Adam Adler; James Chodosh; Lida Radfar; Astrid Rasmussen; Donald U. Stone; David M. Lewis; Shibo Li; Kristi A. Koelsch; Ann Igoe; Mitali Talsania; Jay Kumar; Jacen S. Maier-Moore; Valerie M. Harris; Rajaram Gopalakrishnan; Roland Jonsson; James A. Lessard; Xianglan Lu; Jacques-Eric Gottenberg; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham; Andrew J.W. Huang

More than 80% of autoimmune disease predominantly affects females, but the mechanism for this female bias is poorly understood. We suspected that an X chromosome dose effect accounts for this, and we undertook this study to test our hypothesis that trisomy X (47,XXX; occurring in ∼1 in 1,000 live female births) would be increased in patients with female‐predominant diseases (systemic lupus erythematosus [SLE], primary Sjögrens syndrome [SS], primary biliary cirrhosis, and rheumatoid arthritis [RA]) compared to patients with diseases without female predominance (sarcoidosis) and compared to controls.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2015

Klinefelter's Syndrome (47,XXY) Among Men with Sjogren's Syndrome

Valerie M. Harris; Joshua Cavett; Biji T. Kurien; Ke Liu; Kristi A. Koelsch; Lida Radfar; David M. Lewis; Donald U. Stone; Shibo Li; Barbara M. Segal; Daniel J. Wallace; Michael H. Weisman; Jennifer A. Kelly; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Bernado Pons-Estel; Roland Jonsson; Xianglan Lu; Jacques Eric Gottenberg; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Deborah S. Cunninghame-Graham; Edward C. Keystone; Andrew J.W. Huang; Michael T. Brennan; Pamela Hughes; Gabor G. Illei; Corinne Miceli; Vivian P. Bykerk; Gideon M. Hirschfield; Gang Xie; Wan-Fai Ng

Are Ankylosing Spondylitis, Psoriatic Arthritis and Undifferentiated Spondylarthritis Associated with an Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Disease?For a searchable version of these abstracts, please visit www.acrabstracts.org. Please Note: It may take several minutes for this file to download.Background/Purpose: Person-centred care (PCC) is a holistic approach with respectful and individualized care allowing negotiation of care where persons with health problems are empowered to be involved in health decisions. Patients’ illness narratives constitute a starting point for building a collaboration with health care professionals and to empower them to play an active role in their health care. Little is known of the impact of PCC vs. regular care on patients’ skills as health care consumers. The aim was to study the impact on effective consumers’ skills over 6 and 12 months as measured by the Effective Consumer Scale (EC17) in patients undergoing biological therapy and randomly assigned to either a nurse-led rheumatology clinic (NLC) based on PCC or to a rheumatologist-led clinic (RLC) based on regular care.Methods: A 12 month RCT in 107 patients with chronic inflammatory arthritis1. Inclusion criteria were ongoing biological therapy and a DAS28 ≤3.2. All patients met a rheumatologist at inclusion and after 12 months, while the 6 month follow-up was randomized to either at an NLC (PCC) or at an RLC (regular care). Outcome measure was the EC17, developed and endorsed by the OMERACT, including five subscales; 1. Use of health information, 2. Clarifying personal priorities, 3. Communicating with others, 4. Negotiating roles and 5. Deciding and taking action. EC17 total score ranges from 0-100, worse to best. Differences between and within NLC and RLC were analyzed with Friedmans’ test or Mann Whitney U-test.Results: After 12 months 97 patients completed the RCT (NLC n=47, RLC n=50), mean (SD) age 55.4 (12.7) years, disease duration 16.7 (11.5) years, DAS28 2.1 (0.7), HAQ 0.54 (0.38), global health 20.4 (17.1), pain 21.1 (18.0) and 56% were women. There were no statistically significant differences within or between the two intervention groups at baseline nor in EC17 total score mean (SD) at baseline (NLC 83.5 (9.4) vs. RLC 83.2 (10.8), 6 months (NLC 85.4 (10.4) vs. RLC 82.9 (10.9) and 12 months (NLC 85.3 (11.1) vs. RLC 82.3 (10.9)). However, in NLC there was a statistically significant improvement in EC17 subscale “1. Use of health information” at both 6 and 12 months (p=0.041 and p=0.004 respectively).Conclusion: Replacing just one of three visits over 12 months to an NLC based on PCC instead of an RLC based on regular care resulted in more effective consumers concerning the use of health information. Larger studies over longer time frames focusing on PCC are needed to better understand its full impact on effective consumer skills measured by EC17.References:1. Larsson I, et al. Randomized controlled trial of a nurse-led rheumatology clinic for monitoring biological therapy. J Adv Nurs 2014;70:164-75.Background/Purpose: Chronic widespread pain (CWP), one of the hallmarks of fibromyalgia, is not uncommon in adolescents and it has previously been shown that adolescents with pain often become young adults with pain. CWP often co-varies with anxiety, depression, and stress symptoms in adults, but the knowledge regarding this is small in youth and young adults.The aim was to study the associations between CWP, anxiety, depression and stress in adolescents attending first year of high school.Methods: A computerized questionnaire to 296 adolescents attending Swedish high school, with validated questions regarding presence and distribution of pain (Epipain mannequin), stress symptoms (ELO question), anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – HADS), and health related quality of life (HRQL as measured by EQ5D). Pain was considered chronic when persistent for more than three months, and the subgroup CWP was defined according to the 1990 ACR criteria for fibromyalgia. Statistical analyses in SPSS v21 with comparison of means by Student’s t-test and proportions by chi2-test or Fischer’s exact test.Results: 257 (87%) out of 296 eligible students, mean (SD) age 16.1 (0.7) and 65.8% girls, responded to the questionnaire. Prevalence of chronic pain was 20.8% and that of the subgroup CWP was 4.7%, without any gender differences (boys 18.2% vs girls 22.2%; p=0.224, and 3.4% vs 5.4%; p=0.692). High level (4 or 5 on a 5 point scale) of stress symptoms were less common in boys (16.0% vs 28.2%; p=0.015), as was possible or probable anxiety (17.1% vs 44.4%; p<0.001), but not depression (10.3% vs 12.5%; p=0.764). Students with high level of stress reported CWP five times more often than those with less stress (30.4% vs 5.8%; p=0.001). Students with probable anxiety reported CWP ten times more often than students with no anxiety (17.6% vs 1.8%; p=0.001), and CWP was also more common, but not statistically significant, in students with probable depression (20.0% vs 3.1%; p=0.163). Those reporting CWP had significantly lower HRQL (0.58 vs 0.87; p=0.038) than students with no chronic pain.Conclusion: The high prevalence of chronic pain and the strong associations between CWP and reports of stress and anxiety in adolescents highlights that a multifactorial background to chronic pain must be considered early in life. An apparent lower score in EQ5D also indicates that the presence of CWP has an marked impact on HRQL also in adolescents.Background/Purpose: The treatment target for axial spondyloarthritis (SpA) is to maximize health-related quality of life (HRQoL) by controlling disease activity and improving functioning. The treatment cornerstones are a combination of patient education, pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment. Health professionals are familiar with providing patient education but the knowledge is scarce concerning how this education is experienced by the patients.The aim was to describe patients’ experiences of education in SpA management.Methods: The study had a descriptive design with a qualitative conventional content analysis approach performed in seven steps in accordance with Graneheim & Lundman (1). The analysis aimed to describe and preserve contextual meanings. After coding and subgrouping meaningful parts of the text were merged into categories. Eleven interviews were conducted between 2014-2015 in patients with SpA based on a strategic sampling in order to achieve variation with regard to sex (7 men, 4 women), age (38-66 years), subdiagnoses (5 patients with AS, 6 with USpA), quality of life (EQ5D 0.29-1.0), disease activity (BASDAI 1-6), physical function (BASFI 0-5), and global health (BASG 0-7) .Results: Three categories representing patients’ experiences of patient education in disease management emerged; guiding education, reliable education and available education. Guiding education comprised SpA management including disease knowledge such as symptoms, prognosis, treatment, self-management, climate impact, heredity, and assisting devices. Reliable education meant how and by whom the education was communicated and was considered reliable if it was based on science and communicated by specialists, for example by physician, nurse, PT, dietician and senior patients with experience of rheumatic diseases. The patients experienced difficulties in assessing the large flow of education coming from various sources. Individualized education also increased the reliability. Available education meant that the education can and should be presented in varied formats, and that the amount of information could be chosen. The education could be given orally (through meetings, videos, lectures), in writing (by pamphlets, e-mails, journals, webpages) or obtained through own personal experiences. There were requests to utilize newer media like skype, video and chat forums. Furthermore, individual contacts with healthcare professionals when needed were of importance.Conclusion: This study highlights the importance of obtaining a guiding, reliable and available patient education for management of SpA. Health care professionals need to consider the importance of presenting varied formats of education based on patients’ experiences and expectations.References:1.Graneheim UH, Lundman B. Qualitative content analysis in nursing research: concepts, procedures and measures to achieve trustworthiness. Nurse education today 2004;24(2):105-12.PMN Reactivity Contribute to Acute Onset Joint Inflammation By Increasing CXCL8 Production in Joints of RA Patients with Anti-Collagen II AntibodiesBig Data International Primary Sjogren Syndrome Registry : Baseline Characterization and Diagnostic Approach in 6047 Patients Fulfilling the 2002 AE CriteriaThe Link Between DAS28 and the Short-Term Risk of Acute Coronary Syndrome in RA, and Its Driving FactorsHypomethylation in Enhancer and Promoter Regions of Interferon Regulated Genes in Multiple Tissues Is Associated with Primary Sjogrens SyndromeReceptor Activator of Nuclear Factor Kappa-B Ligand (RANKL) and Sclerostin Are Related to Joint Destruction in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Unrelated to Polymorphisms of the Genes

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Biji T. Kurien

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Kristi A. Koelsch

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Andrew J.W. Huang

Washington University in St. Louis

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Astrid Rasmussen

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Ke Liu

University of Cincinnati

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Lida Radfar

University of Oklahoma

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Shibo Li

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Xianglan Lu

University of Oklahoma

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