All Stories

  1. Expression of Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli Map Is Significantly Different than That of Other Type III Secreted EffectorsIn Vivo
  2. Actin Pedestal Formation by Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli Enhances Bacterial Host Cell Attachment and Concomitant Type III Translocation
  3. Enteric Pathogens That Affect Intestinal Epithelial Tight Junctions
  4. Epithelial Response to Enteric Pathogens: Activation of Chloride Secretory Pathways
  5. AGA's Approach to the Microbiome
  6. AGA's Approach to the Microbiome
  7. Bacterial infections of the small intestine
  8. Escherichia coli
  9. Physiology of Host-pathogen Interactions
  10. Letter from the Editor
  11. Mentorship in Academic Medicine
  12. 2010 AGA Presidential Address
  13. Exciting times for gastrointestinal microbiology
  14. Sara Murray Jordan, First Woman President of the American Gastroenterological Association (1942–1944)
  15. Intestinal Microbes in Health and Disease
  16. Tight Junctions and Enteropathogenic E. coli
  17. Our New President—Gail A. Hecht, MD, MS
  18. WITHDRAWN: Gail Hecht New AGA Institute President
  19. Women in Gastroenterology: Exciting Times and Trends
  20. Inflammatory Bowel Disease — Live Transmission
  21. Gail Hecht New American Gastroenterological Association Vice President-Elect
  22. In Memory of Robert H. Costa (1957–2006)
  23. In the Beginning Was Helicobacter pylori: Roles for Microbes in Other Intestinal Disorders
  24. Physiology of Host-Pathogen Interactions
  25. Early Enterocyte Responses to Enteropathogenic E. Coli
  26. Microbial Pathogenesis and the Intestinal Epithelial Cell
  27. Microbial Pathogens That Affect Tight Junctions
  28. EPEC-activated ezrin participates in signaling that disrupts barrier function
  29. ERK and PKCξ independently contribute to the EPEC-induced inflammatory response
  30. Innate immunity and the gut
  31. Enteropathogenic E. coli dephosphorylates occludin disrupting its association with intestinal epithelial tight junctions
  32. Bacterial, Viral, and Toxic Causes of Diarrhea, Gastroenteritis, and Anorectal Infections
  33. Bacterial, Viral, and Toxic Causes of Diarrhea, Gastroenteritis, and Anorectal Infections