Molecular analysis of the PDS gene in Pendred syndrome.
暂无分享,去创建一个
S. Scherer | L. Tsui | W. Reardon | R. Trembath | L. Luxon | B. Coyle | P. Kendall‐Taylor | J. Herbrick | P. Phelps | L. Luxon | J. Lee | R. Coffey | A. Grueters | E. Gausden | A. Grossman4 | L. Tsui | Jeffrey Lee | Ashley Grossman | Peter D. Phelps | Eleanor Gausden | P. D. Phelps | Jeffrey R. Lee
[1] R. Ramsden,et al. Hearing Loss , 2017, Quick Reference Guide to Pediatric Care.
[2] W. Reardon,et al. Radiological malformations of the ear in Pendred syndrome. , 1998, Clinical radiology.
[3] W. Reardon. Connexin 26 gene mutation and autosomal recessive deafness , 1998, The Lancet.
[4] V. Sheffield,et al. Pendred syndrome is caused by mutations in a putative sulphate transporter gene (PDS) , 1997, Nature Genetics.
[5] E. Pennisi. The Architecture of Hearing , 1997, Science.
[6] W. Reardon,et al. Pendred syndrome--100 years of underascertainment? , 1997, QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians.
[7] Tony Kouzarides,et al. The HMG-box transcription factor HBP1 is targeted by the pocket proteins and E1A , 1997, Oncogene.
[8] H. Heng,et al. Cloning and chromosomal mapping of four putative novel human G-protein-coupled receptor genes. , 1997, Gene.
[9] H. Shih,et al. HBP1: a HMG box transcriptional repressor that is targeted by the retinoblastoma family. , 1997, Genes & development.
[10] M. Pembrey,et al. Pendred syndrome: evidence for genetic homogeneity and further refinement of linkage. , 1997, Journal of medical genetics.
[11] Christer Holmberg,et al. Mutations of the Down–regulated in adenoma (DRA) gene cause congenital chloride diarrhoea , 1996, Nature Genetics.
[12] V. Sheffield,et al. Pendred syndrome maps to chromosome 7q21-34 and is caused by an intrinsic defect in thyroid iodine organification , 1996, Nature Genetics.
[13] M. Pembrey,et al. Pendred syndrome (goitre and sensorineural hearing loss) maps to chromosome 7 in the region containing the nonsyndromic deafness gene DFNB4 , 1996, Nature Genetics.
[14] S. Scherer,et al. Positional candidate genes for congenital chloride diarrhea suggested by high-resolution physical mapping in chromosome region 7q31. , 1996, Genome research.
[15] Eric S. Lander,et al. The diastrophic dysplasia gene encodes a novel sulfate transporter: Positional cloning by fine-structure linkage disequilibrium mapping , 1994, Cell.
[16] M. Lazdunski,et al. Expression cloning in K+ transport defective yeast and distribution of HBP1, a new putative HMG transcriptional regulator. , 1994, Nucleic acids research.
[17] J. Testa,et al. Localization of a candidate colon tumor-suppressor gene (DRA) to 7q22-q31.1 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. , 1994, Genomics.
[18] A. Chapelle,et al. Mapping of the regulatory subunits RIβ and RIIβ of cAMP-Dependent protein kinase genes on human chromosome 7 , 1992 .
[19] R. Eddy,et al. Human laminin B1 chain. A multidomain protein with gene (LAMB1) locus in the q22 region of chromosome 7. , 1987, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[20] G. Fraser,et al. Association of congenital deafness with goitre (Pendred's syndrome): A study of 207 families , 1964, Annals of human genetics.
[21] S. Antonarakis. Recommendations for a nomenclature system for human gene mutations , 1998 .
[22] W. Reardon,et al. Pitfalls in practice, diagnosis and misdiagnosis in Pendred Syndrome , 1997 .
[23] J. Nadol. Medical progress : hearing loss , 1993 .
[24] S. Scherer,et al. Localization of the human dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase gene (DLD) to 7q31----q32. , 1991, Cytogenetics and cell genetics.
[25] C. Holm,et al. Childhood deafness in the European community. , 1981, Scandinavian audiology.