Skip to search formSkip to main contentSkip to account menu

ALPP gene

Known as: SEAP, ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE, PLACENTAL, ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE, SECRETED 
This gene plays a role in phosphatase activity in the placenta.
National Institutes of Health

Papers overview

Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
2011
2011
BackgroundChinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells are among the most widely used hosts for therapeutic protein production. Yet few… 
Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
As a part of our program aimed at exploring the biological activity of symmetrical substitution of side chains into the… 
Highly Cited
2002
Highly Cited
2002
Evidence is growing that biological membranes contain lipid microdomains or “rafts” that may be involved in processes such as… 
Highly Cited
1999
Highly Cited
1999
As gene therapy advances, the ability to regulate transgene expression will become paramount for safety and efficacy. In this… 
Highly Cited
1998
Highly Cited
1998
In a screening for new inhibitors of NF-KB and AP-1 mediated signal transduction pathways in COS-7 cells using secreted alkaline… 
Highly Cited
1994
Highly Cited
1994
Chemiluminescent assays are described for the secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) and beta-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene… 
Highly Cited
1992
Highly Cited
1992
Placental (PLAP) and germ-cell (GCAP) alkaline phosphatases are inhibited uncompetitively by L-Leu and L-Phe. Whereas L-Phe… 
Highly Cited
1992
Highly Cited
1992
Affinity chromatography of human plasma on placental-alkaline-phosphatase-Sepharose columns (placental alkaline phosphatase, PLAP… 
Highly Cited
1990
Highly Cited
1990
A set of 21 early maternal serum samples (19 first‐trimester and two at 14 weeks) from pregnancies resulting in a child with Down…