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Bevin P. Engelward

Bevin P. Engelward
Division of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

About This Project

‘Recombomice’ - A New Tool for Studying Homologous Recombination In vivo

Mechanisms of Low Dose Radio-Suppression of Genomic Instability

Technical Abstracts

2005 Workshop:
'Recombomice' - A New Tool for Studying Homologous Recombination In vivo
Hendricks, C., Kovalchuk, O., and Engelward, B.

Publications

Wiktor-Brown, D.M., Kwon, H.S., Nam, Y.S., So, P.T.C., and Engelward, B.P. (2008). Integrated one- and two-photon imaging platform reveals clonal expansion as a major driver of mutation load. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105(30):10314-10319.

Wiktor-Brown, D.M., Olipitz, W., Hendricks, C.A., Rugo, R.E., and Engelward, B.P. (2008). Tissue-specific differences in the accumulation of sequence rearrangements with age. DNA Repair 7(5):694-703.

Helleday, T., Lo, J., van Gent, D.C., and Engelward, B.P. (2007). DNA double-strand break repair: From mechanistic understanding to cancer treatment. DNA Repair 6(7):923-935.

Wiktor-Brown, D.M., Hendricks, C.A, Olipitz, W., and Engleward, B.P. (2006). Visualization of fluorescently-tagged recombinant cells in situ reveals the effects of aging. Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis 47(6):412.

Koturbash, I., Rugo, R.E., Hendricks, C.A., Loree, J., Thibault, B., Kutanzi, K., Pogribny, I., Yanch, J.C. Engelward, B.P., and Kovalchuk, O. (2006). Irradiation induces DNA damage and modulates epigenetic effectors in distant bystander tissue in vivo. Oncogene 225:4267-4275.

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