A novel Alu‐mediated Xq28 microdeletion ablates TAZ and partially deletes DNL1L in a patient with Barth syndrome
暂无分享,去创建一个
J. Towbin | M. Vatta | Harinder R. Singh | Yuxin Fan | L. Peña | Zhao Yang | Saad Siddiqui | Brandy H. Westerfield
[1] Sei-ichi Tanuma,et al. DNase X Is a Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored Membrane Enzyme That Provides a Barrier to Endocytosis-mediated Transfer of a Foreign Gene* , 2007, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[2] B. Byrne,et al. Cardiac and Clinical Phenotype in Barth Syndrome , 2006, Pediatrics.
[3] R. Sinke,et al. Frequency of the deletion polymorphism of DNASE1L1 in 137 patients with acid maltase deficiency (Pompe disease). , 2006, Experimental and molecular pathology.
[4] P. Fernhoff,et al. X‐linked fetal cardiomyopathy caused by a novel mutation in the TAZ gene , 2006, Prenatal diagnosis.
[5] D. Kaufman,et al. A Late Origin of DNA Replication in the Trinucleotide Repeat Region of the Human FMR2 Gene , 2006, Cell cycle.
[6] M. Durán,et al. X‐linked cardioskeletal myopathy and neutropenia (Barth syndrome): An update , 2004, American journal of medical genetics. Part A.
[7] M. Batzer,et al. Alu repeats and human genomic diversity , 2002, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[8] C. Shaw,et al. A recurrent deletion in the ubiquitously expressed NEMO (IKK-gamma) gene accounts for the vast majority of incontinentia pigmenti mutations. , 2001, Human molecular genetics.
[9] S. Servidei,et al. Deletion polymorphism of DNASE1L1, an X-linked DNase I-like gene, in acid maltase deficiency disorders. , 2001, Experimental and molecular pathology.
[10] J. Johnston,et al. Mutation characterization and genotype-phenotype correlation in Barth syndrome. , 1997, American journal of human genetics.
[11] E. Maestrini,et al. A novel X-linked gene, G4.5. is responsible for Barth syndrome , 1996, Nature Genetics.
[12] D. Sillence,et al. X linked fatal infantile cardiomyopathy maps to Xq28 and is possibly allelic to Barth syndrome. , 1995, Journal of medical genetics.
[13] P. Green,et al. Characteristic mRNA abnormality found in half the patients with severe haemophilia A is due to large DNA inversions. , 1993, Human molecular genetics.
[14] Stylianos E. Antonarakis,et al. Inversions disrupting the factor VIII gene are a common cause of severe haemophilia A , 1993, Nature Genetics.
[15] B. Clark,et al. X-linked dilated cardiomyopathy with neutropenia, growth retardation, and 3-methylglutaconic aciduria. , 1991, The Journal of pediatrics.
[16] J. Berden,et al. An X-linked mitochondrial disease affecting cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle and neutrophil leucocytes , 1983, Journal of the Neurological Sciences.