Shiga Toxins Induce, Superinduce, and Stabilize a Variety of C-X-C Chemokine mRNAs in Intestinal Epithelial Cells, Resulting in Increased Chemokine Expression
Cheleste M. Thorpe(Tufts Medical Center), David W. K. Acheson(University of Oxford), Wendy E. Smith(Maine Medical Center), Bryan P. Hurley(Harvard University)
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