Stephen Larcombe

Stephen Larcombe

University of Glasgow

H-index: 14

Europe-United Kingdom

About Stephen Larcombe

Stephen Larcombe, With an exceptional h-index of 14 and a recent h-index of 10 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Glasgow,

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

The developmental hierarchy and scarcity of replicative slender trypanosomes in blood challenges their role in infection maintenance

A parasite DNA binding protein with potential to influence disease susceptibility acts as an analogue of mammalian HMGA transcription factors

When is a slender not a slender? The cell-cycle arrest and scarcity of slender parasites challenges the role of bloodstream trypanosomes in infection maintenance

Comment on ‘Unexpected plasticity in the life cycle of Trypanosoma brucei’

Susceptibility to disease (tropical theileriosis) is associated with differential expression of host genes that possess motifs recognised by a pathogen DNA binding protein

Stephen Larcombe Information

University

Position

IBAHCM

Citations(all)

739

Citations(since 2020)

330

Cited By

539

hIndex(all)

14

hIndex(since 2020)

10

i10Index(all)

16

i10Index(since 2020)

13

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Top articles of Stephen Larcombe

The developmental hierarchy and scarcity of replicative slender trypanosomes in blood challenges their role in infection maintenance

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2023/10/17

A parasite DNA binding protein with potential to influence disease susceptibility acts as an analogue of mammalian HMGA transcription factors

PloS one

2023/6/5

When is a slender not a slender? The cell-cycle arrest and scarcity of slender parasites challenges the role of bloodstream trypanosomes in infection maintenance

bioRxiv

2023/4/6

Comment on ‘Unexpected plasticity in the life cycle of Trypanosoma brucei’

Elife

2022/2/1

Stephen Larcombe
Stephen Larcombe

H-Index: 10

Susceptibility to disease (tropical theileriosis) is associated with differential expression of host genes that possess motifs recognised by a pathogen DNA binding protein

PLoS One

2022/1/21

See List of Professors in Stephen Larcombe University(University of Glasgow)

Co-Authors

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