Stuart I. Hodgetts
Department of Anatomy and Human Biology
The University of Western Australia
Nedlands
Perth
Name/email consistency: high
- A role for natural killer cells in the rapid death of cultured donor myoblasts after transplantation. Hodgetts, S.I., Spencer, M.J., Grounds, M.D. Transplantation (2003)
- Irradiation of dystrophic host tissue prior to myoblast transfer therapy enhances initial (but not long-term) survival of donor myoblasts. Hodgetts, S.I., Grounds, M.D. J. Cell. Sci. (2003)
- Complement and myoblast transfer therapy: donor myoblast survival is enhanced following depletion of host complement C3 using cobra venom factor, but not in the absence of C5. Hodgetts, S.I., Grounds, M.D. Immunol. Cell Biol. (2001)
- Why do cultured transplanted myoblasts die in vivo? DNA quantification shows enhanced survival of donor male myoblasts in host mice depleted of CD4+ and CD8+ cells or Nk1.1+ cells. Hodgetts, S.I., Beilharz, M.W., Scalzo, A.A., Grounds, M.D. Cell. Transplant (2000)