Search results for "Screen"

showing 10 items of 1374 documents

Screening for multiple hereditary hypercoagulability factors using the amplification refractory mutation system

2003

Many hereditary factors have been implicated in the development of arterial and/or venous thromboembolic diseases. A number of these risk factors can be identified by the amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS). However, the underlying technical conditions for performing ARMS are highly variable, and depend on which risk factors are being analyzed. We have now developed a novel ARMS-based system to simultaneously screen for multiple hypercoagulability factors under identical PCR conditions. This can greatly simplify the process of screening for hereditary hypercoagulability.

GeneticsBase SequenceGenetic Carrier ScreeningHomozygoteGenetic Carrier ScreeningSingle-strand conformation polymorphismBlood ProteinsHematologyBlood Coagulation DisordersBiologymedicine.diseaseThrombophiliaBioinformaticsPolymerase Chain ReactionThrombosisBlood Coagulation FactorsRefractoryMutation (genetic algorithm)medicineCoagulopathyHumansMass ScreeningRisk factorDNA PrimersThrombosis Research
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Detection of mammalian carcinogens with an immunological DNA synthesis-inhibition test.

1992

There is a close relationship between genotoxicity, mutagenicity and carcinogenicity. But the controversy of which short-term test system best recognizes human carcinogens is still going on. Currently, the Salmonella gene mutation assay ('Ames test') is the most widely used test for the screening of mutagens. However, many in vitro tests hold unsatisfactory validity data, presumably because of the inability of present short-term tests to detect non-genotoxic carcinogens, which are increasingly being brought into focus in the discussions of genesis of cancer. One principle often neglected in this context is the property of genotoxic agents to inhibit replicative DNA synthesis in (proliferati…

GeneticsDNA ReplicationCancer ResearchDNA synthesisDNA damageCarcinogenicity TestsContext (language use)General MedicineGene mutationBiologymedicine.disease_causeAmes testImmunoenzyme TechniquesCarcinogen ScreeningmedicineCarcinogensHumansFalse Positive ReactionsCarcinogenGenotoxicityDNA DamageHeLa CellsCarcinogenesis
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The time to prevent mendelian genetic diseases from donated or own gametes has come

2015

GeneticsOocyte DonationGenetic Carrier ScreeningGenetic Diseases InbornInfant NewbornObstetrics and GynecologyGenetic CounselingBiologysymbols.namesakeGerm CellsReproductive MedicinePregnancyMendelian inheritancesymbolsHumansFemaleFertility and Sterility
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Thirty-four novel mutations of the GLA gene in 121 patients with Fabry disease

2005

Fabry disease (FD) is an X-chromosomal disorder caused by mutations in the GLA gene encoding the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase A. We performed mutation screening on a cohort of 121 patients including 84 male and 37 female index cases and identified a total of 90 different mutations, 34 of which are reported for the first time here. Both point mutations (74.4%) and 'short length' rearrangements (25.6%) were found, including missense (54.4%), nonsense (14.4%), and splice site point mutations (5.6%), deletions (17.8%) or insertions/duplications (5.6%) of a few nucleotides, and complex rearrangements including larger deletions (2.2%). GLA mutations were identified in 82 (97.6%) of the 84…

GeneticsPoint mutationmedia_common.quotation_subjectNonsenseBiologymedicine.diseaseFabry diseaseGla geneRNA splicingGeneticsmedicineMutation screeningMissense mutationPeptide sequenceGenetics (clinical)media_commonHuman Mutation
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PATHOGENIC VARIANTS WITHIN ACMG SECONDARY FINDINGS GENES IN 24,591 HEALTHY INDIVIDUALS USING CLINICAL EXOME SEQUENCING FOR CARRIER SCREENING

2020

GeneticsReproductive MedicineHealthy individualsObstetrics and GynecologyBiologyCarrier screeningGeneExome sequencingFertility and Sterility
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A novel approach to CFTR mutation testing by pyrosequencing-based assay panels adapted to ethnicities.

2009

Abstract Background: Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a common autosomal recessive genetic disorder caused by a variety of sequence alterations in the CFTR gene [cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (ATP-binding cassette sub-family C, member 7)]. Because the relative prevalence of mutations strongly depends on the ethnic background, first-level testing of CF as defined by recent consensus recommendations ought to be adaptable to the ethnicity of patients. Methods: We therefore developed and implemented a diagnostic approach to first-level testing for CF based on published mutation frequencies and Pyrosequencing (PSQ) technology that we complemented with standard procedures of mutation…

Geneticsmedicine.diagnostic_testbiologyBase SequenceCystic FibrosisGenetic Carrier ScreeningBiochemistry (medical)Clinical BiochemistryGenetic disorderCystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance RegulatorSequence Analysis DNAmedicine.diseaseCystic fibrosisPolymerase Chain ReactionCystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulatorCftr mutationCase-Control StudiesMutation (genetic algorithm)Mutationmedicinebiology.proteinPyrosequencingHumansGenotypingSweat testClinical chemistry
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Screening for microdeletions of the X-chromosome in non-specific mental retardation

2003

Geneticsmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMedical screeningmedicine.diseaselaw.inventionDevelopmental disorderNon specificlawGene duplicationIntellectual disabilityGeneticsMedicinebusinessGenetics (clinical)X chromosomePolymerase chain reactionGenetic testingAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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Abnormal mitotic spindle assembly and cytokinesis induced by D-Limonene in cultured mammalian cells

2013

D-Limonene is found widely in citrus and many other plant species; it is a major constituent of many essential oils and is used as a solvent for commercial purposes. With the discovery of its chemotherapeutic properties against cancer, it is important to investigate the biological effects of the exposure to D-Limonene and elucidate its, as yet unknown, mechanism of action. We reported here that D-Limonene is toxic in V79 Chinese hamster cells in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, to determine the cellular target of D-Limonene, we performed morphological observations and immunocytochemical analysis and we showed that this drug has a direct effect on dividing cells preventing assembly of mito…

Genome instabilityCell SurvivalHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAurora B kinaseAntineoplastic AgentsSpindle ApparatusBiologyToxicologySeptinMicrotubulesGenomic InstabilityCell LineChromosome segregationInhibitory Concentration 50MicrotubuleChromosome SegregationCricetinaeCyclohexenesGeneticsAnimalsMitosisGenetics (clinical)genomic instability damage-induced mutagenesis mitosis V79 d- LimoneneCytokinesisCell DeathTerpenesAneuploidyTubulin ModulatorsSpindle apparatusCell biologySettore BIO/18 - GeneticaDrug Screening Assays AntitumorLimoneneCytokinesis
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Genome search in celiac disease.

1998

SummaryCeliac disease (CD), a malabsorption disorder of the small intestine, results from ingestion of gluten. The HLA risk factors involved in CD are well known but do not explain the entire genetic susceptibility. To determine the localization of other genetic risk factors, a systematic screening of the genome has been undertaken. The typing information of 281 markers on 110 affected sib pairs and their parents was used to test linkage. Systematic linkage analysis was first performed on 39 pairs in which both sibs had a symptomatic form of CD. Replication of the regions of interest was then carried out on 71 pairs in which one sib had a symptomatic form and the other a silent form of CD. …

GenotypeGenetic LinkageHuman leukocyte antigenBiologyCoeliac diseaseGenetic determinismGenome screeningGene mappingGenetic linkageGeneticsGenetic predispositionmedicineHumansGenetics(clinical)Genetic TestingRisk factorGenetics (clinical)Genetic testingGeneticsmedicine.diagnostic_testLinkageGenome Humanmedicine.diseaseHLACeliac DiseaseResearch Article
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Epidemiological study of nonsyndromic hearing loss in Sicilian newborns

2007

Deafness is caused by a variety of facts, genetic and environmental. Regarding the acquired causes, deafness can be the consequence of prenatal infections, acoustic or cerebral trauma, and the use of ototoxic drugs. Deafness can be the only manifestation (nonsyndromic forms) or it may occur together with other phenotypic findings (syndromic forms). The majority of nonsyndromicdeafness has a genetic basis [Van Camp et al., 1997]. In recent years, deafness and hearing loss have assumed a clinical importance in the study of congenital disorders [Morton et al., 1991]. The clinical interest for hearing loss is supported by the social impact that this disorder has; if not treated, delays in the d…

GenotypeHearing lossHearing Loss SensorineuralDNA Mutational AnalysisNonsense mutationBiologyGene mutationConnexinsneonate deafness geneticExonNeonatal ScreeningGene Frequencyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesGeneticsmedicineHumansGenetic TestingSicilyGeneGenetics (clinical)Chromosome 13GeneticsSplice site mutationInfant NewbornGenetic VariationStop codonConnexin 26PhenotypeMutationmedicine.symptomAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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