Matthew Waldor

Matthew Waldor

Harvard University

H-index: 102

North America-United States

About Matthew Waldor

Matthew Waldor, With an exceptional h-index of 102 and a recent h-index of 51 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Harvard University, specializes in the field of host pathogen interaction, infectious diseases.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Temporal and spatial dynamics of Listeria monocytogenes central nervous system infection in mice

Peripheral serotonergic neurons regulate gut motility and anxiety-like behavior

Reverse transcriptase inhibitors prevent liver abscess formation during Escherichia coli bloodstream infection

Divergent genetic landscapes drive lower levels of AmpC induction and stable de-repression in Serratia marcescens compared to Enterobacter cloacae

A pervasive large conjugative plasmid mediates multispecies biofilm formation in the intestinal microbiota increasing resilience to perturbations

Patterns of Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteremic dissemination from the lung

Endoplasmic reticulum stress in the intestinal epithelium initiates purine metabolite synthesis and promotes Th17 cell differentiation in the gut

A bile metabolite atlas reveals infection-triggered interorgan mediators of intestinal homeostasis and defense

Matthew Waldor Information

University

Position

Professor of Medicine

Citations(all)

37416

Citations(since 2020)

11382

Cited By

30369

hIndex(all)

102

hIndex(since 2020)

51

i10Index(all)

264

i10Index(since 2020)

215

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Matthew Waldor Skills & Research Interests

host pathogen interaction

infectious diseases

Top articles of Matthew Waldor

Temporal and spatial dynamics of Listeria monocytogenes central nervous system infection in mice

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2024/4/23

Peripheral serotonergic neurons regulate gut motility and anxiety-like behavior

Current Biology

2024/2/26

Reverse transcriptase inhibitors prevent liver abscess formation during Escherichia coli bloodstream infection

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2024/1/23

Divergent genetic landscapes drive lower levels of AmpC induction and stable de-repression in Serratia marcescens compared to Enterobacter cloacae

Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy

2024/1/10

A pervasive large conjugative plasmid mediates multispecies biofilm formation in the intestinal microbiota increasing resilience to perturbations

bioRxiv

2024

Patterns of Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteremic dissemination from the lung

bioRxiv

2024

Endoplasmic reticulum stress in the intestinal epithelium initiates purine metabolite synthesis and promotes Th17 cell differentiation in the gut

Immunity

2023/5/9

A bile metabolite atlas reveals infection-triggered interorgan mediators of intestinal homeostasis and defense

bioRxiv

2023/3/5

Peptidyl tRNA hydrolase is required for robust prolyl-tRNA turnover in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Mbio

2023/2/28

Quantitative dose-response analysis untangles host bottlenecks to enteric infection

Nature communications

2023/1/28

Undecaprenyl phosphate translocases confer conditional microbial fitness

Nature

2023/1/26

Synthetic peptides that form nanostructured micelles have potent antibiotic and antibiofilm activity against polymicrobial infections

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2023/1/24

Peripheral serotonergic neurons regulate anxiety-like behavior and intestinal barrier immunity

bioRxiv

2023

CanB is a metabolic mediator of antibiotic resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Nature microbiology

2023/1

Genetic and immune determinants of E. coli liver abscess formation

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2023/12/19

A tRNA modification in Mycobacterium tuberculosis facilitates optimal intracellular growth

Elife

2023/9/27

Innate immune responses yield tissue-specific bottlenecks that scale with pathogen dose

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2023/9/12

O-Antigen Diversification Masks Identification of Highly Pathogenic Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli O104: H4-Like Strains

Microbiology Spectrum

2023/6/15

Membrane vesicle delivery of a streptococcal M protein disrupts the blood–brain barrier by inducing autophagic endothelial cell death

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2023/6/13

Dual control of lysogeny and phage defense by a phosphorylation-based toxin/antitoxin system

2022/12/28

See List of Professors in Matthew Waldor University(Harvard University)