Editorial Board
Mohammed El-Magd
Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kafrelsheikh University, Egypt · Egypt
Editorial leadership for Journal of Evolving Stem Cell Research ISSN 2574-4372
Research interests
- Molecular Biology
- Developmental Biology
- Molecular Embryology
- Anatomy
- Biotechnology
- Bioinformatics
- Gene Transfer
- Gene Cloning
- Production Of Transgenic Animals
- Stem Cell Therapy
- Snps Detection
- Genetics
- Marked Assisted Selection (Mas)
- Quantitative Trait Loci (Qtl)
Biography
- Dr. Mohammed Abu El-Magd has received his PhD from Royal Veterinary College (RVC) in London University, UK, during the period of 2005-2009.
- Currently, he is working as associate professor of Anatomy& Embryology and specialist of Animal Biotechnology in Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kafrelsheikh University, Egypt.
- He is also a manager of the Molecular Biology Lab in the same faculty.
- His research has included molecular biology, developmental biology and animal biotechnology.
- Based on this research and fellowship training he has received a full scholarship (4 years) to London University and 2 projected funded by STDF and KFS.
- He is an editorial board member and a peer reviewer of several international journals and also a member of many International Associations and Societies.
- He has authored many peer-reviewed international research articles and international books.
Selected publications
- Therapeutic Effect of Camel Milk and Its Exosomes on MCF7 Cells In Vitro and In Vivo 2018 cited 140×
- Potential Effect of Exosomes Derived from Cancer Stem Cells and MSCs on Progression of DEN-Induced HCC in Rats 2018 cited 124×
- Hesperidin, piperine and bee venom synergistically potentiate the anticancer effect of tamoxifen against breast cancer cells 2018 cited 110×
- Camel milk exosomes modulate cyclophosphamide-induced oxidative stress and immuno-toxicity in rats 2019 cited 78×
- Ruthenium(II)/(III) DMSO-Based Complexes of 2-Aminophenyl Benzimidazole with In Vitro and In Vivo Anticancer Activity 2020 cited 51×
- Chitosan nanoparticles from Artemia salina inhibit progression of hepatocellular carcinoma in vitro and in vivo 2018 cited 49×
Ranked by citation impact (Crossref) where available, newest otherwise · verified via ORCID.
Considering JESR for your work?
This journal is guided by Mohammed El-Magd (Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kafrelsheikh University, Egypt) and a peer-review board of practising researchers. Open access, author-retained copyright (CC BY), and a clear editorial process.