Veterinary Medicine, College of
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This community features research by faculty members and students in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Washington State University. Specialized research areas for the college include food- and water-borne diseases, neurobiology, cardiovascular medicine and physiology, immunology and infectious diseases, and microbial genomics and proteomics.
Sub-communities within this community
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Newsletters, College of Veterinary Medicine
This collection contains newsletters created by the College of Veterinary Medicine at WSU.
Collections in this community
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Electronic Dissertations and Theses - Veterinary Medicine
This collection contains theses and dissertations by students in the College of Veterinary Medicine at WSU.
Recent Submissions
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EFFECTS OF MYOSIN HEAVY CHAIN ISOFORMS AND CARDIOMYOPATHY MUTATIONS ON SARCOMERE LENGTH-DEPENDENT ACTIVATION
(2019)Heritable mutations in cardiac muscle proteins lead to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in humans. There is a lack of knowledge on how HCM/DCM-related mutations alter the molecular ... -
Identifying intracellular roles of the Salmonella invasion-associated injectisome
(2018)Intracellular pathogens either reside within host-derived vacuoles or escape this compartment to inhabit the cytosol. Why some bacteria lyse their internalization vacuole and others cannot remains enigmatic in Gram-negative ... -
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS ON SPERMATOGENESIS
(2018)Compelling evidence from human populations worldwide suggest that sperm counts have declined by ~50% over the last 40 years. It is thought perinatal exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), such as bisphenol A ... -
REGULATION, FUNCTION AND POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS OF MICROCIN PDI FOR MEDICINE AND FOOD SAFTEY
(2018)Microcin PDI (mccPDI) is a class IIa microcin that is encoded as a five-locus genetic unit that is borne by a conjugative plasmid. The microcin was first discovered in Escherichia coli strains 25 and 264 (cattle origin) ... -
BABESIA BIGEMINA TICK STAGE SPECIFIC GENES DURING PARASITE DEVELOPMENT WITHIN ADULT FEMALE RHIPICEPHALUS MICROPLUS
(2018)Babesia bigemina is an intra-erythrocytic parasite that infect cattle and transmitted by tick vectors transovarian transmission. This parasite causes bovine babesiosis (tick cattle fever) and has enormous veterinary, ... -
ENHANCING SPERM PRODUCTION IN THE BULL
(2018)Spermatogenesis is a complex process highly regulated mainly by somatic cells of testes, the Sertoli cells. The number of Sertoli cells for a male is fixed between birth and puberty, and does not increase after puberty ... -
Advance: Impact Report 2017
(2018) -
Advance, Spring/Summer 2018
(2018)