1991. Dohms, John E., and Alan Metz. "Stress—mechanisms of immunosuppression." Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology 30.1:89-109.
1996. Keeler, C. L., et al. "Cloning and characterization of a putative cytadhesin gene (mgc1) from Mycoplasma gallisepticum." Infection and immunity 64.5:1541-1547.
2005. Travis W Bliss, John E Dohms, Marlene G Emara, Calvin L Keeler. "Gene expression profiling of avian macrophage activation." Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology 105.3-4:289-99.
2006. Cynthia M Boettger, John E Dohms. "Separating Mycoplasma gallisepticum field strains from nonpathogenic avian mycoplasmas." Avian Disease 50.4:605-7.
2008. Miha Lavric, Michele N Maughan, Travis W Bliss, John E Dohms, Dusan Bencina, Calvin L Keeler, Mojca Narat. 2008. "Gene expression modulation in chicken macrophages exposed to Mycoplasma synoviae or Escherichia coli." Veterinary Microbiology 126.1-3:111-21.
Contributor to Y. M. Saif Diseases of Poultry 12th edition.[4]
Personal life
Dohms was an avid athlete and outdoorsman, and an All-American lacrosse player while a student at Bowling Green State University.[5][6]
Disappearance and death
Suffering from a form of dementia, Dohms disappeared from his home in Newark, Delaware, on September 13, 2012.[7] Despite an exhaustive police search, Dohms could not be located. A hiker discovered human remains in a wooded area on February 28, 2014, that were identified as belonging to Dohms.[8] He was remembered by his former colleagues who arranged for the placement of a memorial marker near the location where his remains were discovered.[9]
^Quartararo, Elizabeth. "Missing since 2012, professor remembered by friends and relatives", The Review, March 3, 2014. Accessed May 10, 2016. "Bernard Kaplan, a university English professor who has known Dohms since they were both children growing up a block away from each other in Fair Lawn, N.J., said shortly after Dohms’ disappearance, he traveled to their hometown to pass out flyers and let neighbors know to look out for him."