Stephen Scott
University of Cambridge
6 Papers
60 Citations
Stephen Scott is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vascular smooth muscle & Biology. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells Undergo Telomere-Based Senescence in Human Atherosclerosis. Effects of Telomerase and Oxidative Stress
Charles Matthews,Isabelle Gorenne,Stephen Scott,N. Figg,Peter J. Kirkpatrick,Andrew J. Ritchie,Martin Goddard,Martin R. Bennett +7 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that human atherosclerosis is characterized by senescence of VSMCs, accelerated by oxidative stress-induced DNA damage, inhibition of telomerase and marked telomere shortening.
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Vascular smooth muscle cell senescence in atherosclerosis
TL;DR: The evidence for vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) derived from human plaques show numerous features of senescence both in culture and in vivo, and the mechanisms and triggers leading to theirsenescence are summarized.
208
Human vascular smooth muscle cells from restenosis or in-stent stenosis sites demonstrate enhanced responses to p53: implications for brachytherapy and drug treatment for restenosis.
TL;DR: It is concluded that p53 expression and function are normal or increased in r-VSMCs and may underlie the success of brachytherapy, and identifies a restenosis VSMC-specific defect in cyclin D degradation induced by DNA damage.
42
Differential cyclin E expression in human in-stent stenosis smooth muscle cells identifies targets for selective anti-restenosis therapy
Michael O'Sullivan,Stephen Scott,Nicola McCarthy,N. Figg,Leonard M. Shapiro,Peter J. Kirkpatrick,Martin R. Bennett +6 more
TL;DR: Human ISS- VSMCs have marked differences in the stable expression of multiple cell cycle regulators, suggesting that ISS-VSMCs derive from P-VS MCs driven to proliferate through cyclin E overexpression, and the critical role forcyclin E-CDK2 enables the identification of the first agent that selectively inhibits ISS-vsMC proliferation.