Retraction
In vitro derivation of mammalian germ cells from stem cells and their potential therapeutic application
Paper Information
Record ID:
2068
Author(s):
Journal:
Publication Date:
October 06, 2015
Retraction Date:
December 09, 2015
(9.9 years years ago)
Subject:
Broad Categories:
Biology
Biology
Specific Fields:
Biology - Cellular
Biology - Cellular
Institutions:
- Saito Laboratory of Cell Technology, Yaita, Japan
- School of Dentistry, College of Dental Medicine, Kaoshiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
- College of Engineering, Nihon University, Koriyama, Japan
- Cell Engineering Division,RIKEN BioResource Center, Tsukuba, Japan
- Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, USA
- Institute of Farm Animal Genetics, Friedrich-Löffler-Institut, Neustadt, Germany
- Graduate Institute of Medicine, Center of Stem Cell Research, Center of Environmental Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
- Faculty of Science and Engineering, Tokushima Bunri University, Sanuki, Japan
- Department of Molecular Preventive Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Countries:
Article Type:
Publisher:
Springer
Open Access:
Yes
PubMed ID:
Retraction PubMed ID:
Retraction Details
Citations (2)
2
Total Citations2
Post-Retraction(100.0%)
0
Pre-Retraction0
Same DayPost-Retraction Citation Analysis
0
Within 30 days
0
Within 1 year
2
After 2+ years
2360
Days since retraction (latest)
Application of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Models for Investigating microRNA Regulation in Developmental Processes
Hongyu Chen, Mimi Zhang, Jingzhi Zhang et al. (9 authors)
Frontiers in Genetics
Open Access
Published: May 2022
3 citations
3 citations
2360 days after retraction
Paper citing In vitro derivation of mammalian germ cells from s...
Unknown Authors
Unknown Journal
Published: Dec 2018
1097 days after retraction
Quick Stats
Total Citations:
2
Years Since Retraction:
9.9 years
Open Access:
Yes
Last Checked:
Never