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Your search keyword '"Ciliary Motility Disorders pathology"' showing total 367 results

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367 results on '"Ciliary Motility Disorders pathology"'

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1. A 3000-year-old founder variant in the DRC1 gene causes primary ciliary dyskinesia in Japan and Korea.

2. Airway ciliary microenvironment responses in mice with primary ciliary dyskinesia and central pair apparatus defects.

3. Promoter Deletion Leading to Allele Specific Expression in a Genetically Unsolved Case of Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia.

4. Transcriptional analysis of primary ciliary dyskinesia airway cells reveals a dedicated cilia glutathione pathway.

5. Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia Associated Disease-Causing Variants in CCDC39 and CCDC40 Cause Axonemal Absence of Inner Dynein Arm Heavy Chains DNAH1, DNAH6, and DNAH7.

6. A novel homozygous missense TTC12 variant identified in an infertile Pakistani man with severe oligoasthenoteratozoospermia and primary ciliary dyskinesia.

7. Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia: A Clinical Review.

8. Novel SPEF2 variants cause male infertility and likely primary ciliary dyskinesia.

9. Skewed X-chromosome inactivation drives the proportion of DNAAF6 -defective airway motile cilia and variable expressivity in primary ciliary dyskinesia.

10. Novel homozygous mutations in TXNDC15 causing Meckel syndrome.

11. A novel heterozygous variant of FOXJ1 in a Chinese female with primary ciliary dyskinesia and hydrocephalus: A case report and literature review.

12. Characteristic genetic spectrum of primary ciliary dyskinesia in Japanese patients and global ethnic heterogeneity: population-based genomic variation database analysis.

13. Axonemal structures reveal mechanoregulatory and disease mechanisms.

14. Meckel Gruber and Joubert Syndrome Diagnosed Prenatally: Allelism between the Two Ciliopathies, Complexities of Mutation Types and Digenic Inheritance.

15. Biallelic DAW1 variants cause a motile ciliopathy characterized by laterality defects and subtle ciliary beating abnormalities.

16. Analysis of the diagnosis of Japanese patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia using a conditional reprogramming culture.

17. Expanded phenotype of primary ciliary dyskinesia related to DRC1 pathogenic variant with dysmorphisms and vascular anomalies.

18. Expression of a Truncated Form of ODAD1 Associated with an Unusually Mild Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia Phenotype.

19. A novel CCDC39 mutation causes multiple morphological abnormalities of the flagella in a primary ciliary dyskinesia patient.

20. Wdr47, Camsaps, and Katanin cooperate to generate ciliary central microtubules.

21. Zebrafish Motile Cilia as a Model for Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia.

22. Emerging Genotype-Phenotype Relationships in Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia.

23. Autosomal dominant variants in FOXJ1 causing primary ciliary dyskinesia in two patients with obstructive hydrocephalus.

24. The Antimicrobial Activity of Peripheral Blood Neutrophils Is Altered in Patients with Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia.

25. Structural insights into the cause of human RSPH4A primary ciliary dyskinesia.

26. A founder mutation in TCTN2 causes Meckel-Gruber syndrome type 8 among Jews of Ethiopian and Yemenite origin.

27. A novel heterotaxy gene: Expansion of the phenotype of TTC21B-spectrum disease.

28. Motility of efferent duct cilia aids passage of sperm cells through the male reproductive system.

29. Transcript analysis for variant classification resolution in a child with primary ciliary dyskinesia.

30. Motile cilia and airway disease.

31. Motile cilia genetics and cell biology: big results from little mice.

32. CEP55 promotes cilia disassembly through stabilizing Aurora A kinase.

33. Two novel mutations in the DNAH11 gene in primary ciliary dyskinesia (CILD7) with considerable variety in the clinical and beating cilia phenotype.

34. A novel genetic variant in DNAI2 detected by custom gene panel in a newborn with Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia: case report.

35. Biallelic mutations of CFAP74 may cause human primary ciliary dyskinesia and MMAF phenotype.

36. Two novel TCTN2 mutations cause Meckel-Gruber syndrome.

37. An exome-first approach to aid in the diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia.

38. A novel DNAH11 variant segregating in a sibship with heterotaxy and implications for genetic counseling.

39. Novel compound heterozygous DNAAF2 mutations cause primary ciliary dyskinesia in a Han Chinese family.

40. Comparison of Multiple Breath Washout and Spirometry in Children with Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia and Cystic Fibrosis and Healthy Controls.

41. Mutation of CFAP57, a protein required for the asymmetric targeting of a subset of inner dynein arms in Chlamydomonas, causes primary ciliary dyskinesia.

42. Sperm defects in primary ciliary dyskinesia and related causes of male infertility.

43. Clinical utility of NGS diagnosis and disease stratification in a multiethnic primary ciliary dyskinesia cohort.

44. Rare variants in dynein heavy chain genes in two individuals with situs inversus and developmental dyslexia: a case report.

45. Exacerbations and Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonization are associated with altered lung structure and function in primary ciliary dyskinesia.

46. Novel DNAAF6 variants identified by whole-exome sequencing cause male infertility and primary ciliary dyskinesia.

47. Ventilation Inhomogeneity and Bronchial Basement Membrane Changes in Chronic Neutrophilic Airway Inflammation.

48. Deep phenotyping, including quantitative ciliary beating parameters, and extensive genotyping in primary ciliary dyskinesia.

49. Copy number variation in DRC1 is the major cause of primary ciliary dyskinesia in the Japanese population.

50. Clinical and genetic spectrum in 33 Egyptian families with suspected primary ciliary dyskinesia.

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