Isabel Breyer
University of Bern
7 Papers
128 Citations
Isabel Breyer is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Protein kinase C & Growth factor. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Specific Cellular Responses to α-Tocopherol
Angelo Azzi,Isabel Breyer,Maria Feher,Mariella Pastori,Roberta Ricciarelli,Stefan E. Spycher,Mariagrazia Staffieri,Achim Stocker,Sabine Zimmer,Jean-Marc Zingg +9 more
TL;DR: In the last 10 years precise cellular functions of alpha-tocopherol have been revealed as discussed by the authors, some of which are independent of its antioxidant/radical-scavenging ability.
Modulation of α‐tropomyosin expression by α‐tocopherol in rat vascular smooth muscle cells
TL;DR: The effect of α‐tocopherol (vitamin E) on gene expression in rat vascular smooth muscle cells was studied by the differential display technique and one gene out of about 1000 genes analyzed, identified as α‐tropomyosin, showed an increased transcription level caused by α‐ocopherol treatment.
76
Nonantioxidant functions of alpha-tocopherol in smooth muscle cells.
Angelo Azzi,Isabel Breyer,Maria Feher,Roberta Ricciarelli,Achim Stocker,Sabine Zimmer,Jean-Marc Zingg +6 more
TL;DR: Recently, a new ubiquitous cytosolic alpha-tocopherol binding protein (TAP) was isolated, and motifs suggest that it is a member of the hydrophobic ligand-binding protein family (CRAL-TRIO).
70
Echinococcus granulosus strain typing in Bulgaria: the G1 genotype is predominant in intermediate and definitive wild hosts
TL;DR: To classify the genotype(s) present in intermediate and definitive hosts in Bulgaria, a DNA-based approach was used to assess parasite protoscoleces or strobiles, indicating that the G1 genotype is predominant in Bulgaria.
Differential inhibition by α- and β-tocopherol of human erythroleukemia cell adhesion: role of integrins
Isabel Breyer,Angelo Azzi +1 more
TL;DR: FACS, by using various integrin-specific monoclonal antibodies, has shown that alpha (1-6), beta1, and alphav integrins are less expressed at the cell surface after alpha-tocopherol treatment.
36