Stuart G. Tangye
Centenary Institute for Cancer Medicine and Cell Biology
and University of Sydney
New South Wales
Australia
Name/email consistency: high
- Divide and conquer: the importance of cell division in regulating B-cell responses. Tangye, S.G., Hodgkin, P.D. Immunology (2004)
- A division-linked mechanism for the rapid generation of Ig-secreting cells from human memory B cells. Tangye, S.G., Avery, D.T., Hodgkin, P.D. J. Immunol. (2003)
- Intrinsic differences in the proliferation of naive and memory human B cells as a mechanism for enhanced secondary immune responses. Tangye, S.G., Avery, D.T., Deenick, E.K., Hodgkin, P.D. J. Immunol. (2003)
- Functional requirements for interactions between CD84 and Src homology 2 domain-containing proteins and their contribution to human T cell activation. Tangye, S.G., Nichols, K.E., Hare, N.J., van de Weerdt, B.C. J. Immunol. (2003)
- CD84 is up-regulated on a major population of human memory B cells and recruits the SH2 domain containing proteins SAP and EAT-2. Tangye, S.G., van de Weerdt, B.C., Avery, D.T., Hodgkin, P.D. Eur. J. Immunol. (2002)
- Functional requirement for SAP in 2B4-mediated activation of human natural killer cells as revealed by the X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome. Tangye, S.G., Phillips, J.H., Lanier, L.L., Nichols, K.E. J. Immunol. (2000)
- 2B4-mediated activation of human natural killer cells. Tangye, S.G., Cherwinski, H., Lanier, L.L., Phillips, J.H. Mol. Immunol. (2000)