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Page 14 of 16

  1. Pharmacogenetics enables personalised therapy based on genetic profiling and is increasingly applied in drug discovery. Medicines are developed and used together with pharmacodiagnostic tools to achieve desire...

    Authors: Alice Matimba, Jurgen Del-Favero, Christine Van Broeckhoven and Collen Masimirembwa
    Citation: Human Genomics 2009 3:169
  2. The olfactory receptor gene (OR) superfamily is the largest in the human genome. The superfamily contains 390 putatively functional genes and 465 pseudogenes arranged into 18 gene families and 300 subfamilies. Ev...

    Authors: Tsviya Olender, Doron Lancet and Daniel W. Nebert
    Citation: Human Genomics 2008 3:87
  3. Mitochondria, the powerhouse of the cell, play a critical role in several metabolic processes and apoptotic pathways. Many lines of evidence suggest that mitochondria have a central role in ageing-related neur...

    Authors: Michelangelo Mancuso, Massimiliano Filosto, Daniele Orsucci and Gabriele Siciliano
    Citation: Human Genomics 2008 3:71
  4. In genetic association studies, deviation from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWD) can be due to recent admixture or selection at a locus, but is most commonly due to genotyping errors. In addition to its utility...

    Authors: Srijan Sen and Margit Burmeister
    Citation: Human Genomics 2008 3:36
  5. Liver cystolic aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1A1) has been previously associated with both alcohol dependence and alcohol consumption behaviour, and has been implicated in alcohol-induced flushing and alcohol ...

    Authors: Penelope A. Lind, C. J. Peter Eriksson and Kirk C. Wilhelmsen
    Citation: Human Genomics 2008 3:24
  6. There is considerable inter-ethnic variability in the incidence of CYP2C19 genetic poor metabolisers (var/var). About 3 per cent of Caucasians are CYP2C19 var/var. By contrast, an extremely high incidence (70 per...

    Authors: Huai-Ling Hsu, Kathryn J. Woad, D. Graeme Woodfield and Nuala A. Helsby
    Citation: Human Genomics 2008 3:17
  7. Polymorphisms in drug transporter genes and/or drug-metabolising enzyme genes may contribute to inter-individual variability in rosiglitazone pharmacokinetics in humans. We sought to determine the joint effect...

    Authors: Christina L Aquilante, Lane R. Bushman, Shannon D. Knutsen, Lauren E. Burt, Lucille Capo Rome and Lisa A. Kosmiski
    Citation: Human Genomics 2008 3:7
  8. The use of genomic technologies in biogerontology has the potential to greatly enhance our understanding of human ageing. High-throughput screens for alleles correlated with survival in long-lived people have ...

    Authors: Matt Kaeberlein
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:422
  9. Association studies hold great promise for the elucidation of the genetic basis of diseases. Studies based on functional single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) or on linkage disequilibrium (LD) represent two m...

    Authors: Victoria EH Carlton, James S Ireland, Francisco Useche and Malek Faham
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:391
  10. A variety of techniques exist to describe and depict patterns of pairwise linkage disequilibrium (LD). In the current paper, a new log-linear framework is proposed for the summarisation of local interactions a...

    Authors: A. P. Mander and A. Bansal
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:376
  11. Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a complex disease caused by a combination of Epstein-Barr virus chronic infection, the environment and host genes in a multi-step process of carcinogenesis. The identity of ge...

    Authors: Xiu Chan Guo, Kevin Scott, Yan Liu, Michael Dean, Victor David, George W. Nelson, Randall C. Johnson, Holli H. Dilks, James Lautenberger, Bailey Kessing, Janice Martenson, Li Guan, Shan Sun, Hong Deng, Yuming Zheng, Guy de The…
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:365
  12. Genes for complex disorders have proven hard to find using linkage analysis. The results rarely reach the desired level of significance and researchers often have failed to replicate positive findings. There i...

    Authors: Dimitrios Avramopoulos, Peter Zandi, Adrian Gherman, M. Daniele Fallin and Susan S. Bassett
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:345
  13. The NAD(P)H:quinone acceptor oxidoreductase (NQO) gene family belongs to the flavoprotein clan and, in the human genome, consists of two genes (NQO1 and NQO2). These two genes encode cytosolic flavoenzymes that c...

    Authors: Vasilis Vasiliou, David Ross and Daniel W. Nebert
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:329
  14. The detection of gene - gene and gene - environment interactions associated with complex human disease or pharmacogenomic endpoints is a difficult challenge for human geneticists. Unlike rare, Mendelian diseas...

    Authors: Alison A Motsinger and Marylyn D Ritchie
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:318
  15. Recent developments in the statistical analysis of genome-wide studies are reviewed. Genome-wide analyses are becoming increasingly common in areas such as scans for disease-associated markers and gene express...

    Authors: Frank Dudbridge, Arief Gusnanto and Bobby PC Koeleman
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:310
  16. Fabry disease, an X-linked recessive inborn error of glycosphingolipid catabolism, results from the deficient activity of the lysosomal exoglycohydrolase, α-galactosidase A (EC 3.2.1.22; α-Gal A). The molecula...

    Authors: Junaid Shabbeer, Makiko Yasuda, Stacy D Benson and Robert J Desnick
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:297
  17. Although highly penetrant alleles of BRCA1 and BRCA2 have been shown to predispose to breast cancer, the majority of breast cancer cases are assumed to result from the presence of low-moderate penetrant alleles a...

    Authors: Sevtap Savas, Steffen Schmidt, Hamdi Jarjanazi and Hilmi Ozcelik
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:287
  18. The sequence of the human genome provides a scaffold on which numerous annotations, such the locations of genes, can be laid. Genome browsers have been created to allow the simultaneous display of multiple ann...

    Authors: Terrence S Furey
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:266
  19. Genetic data are now widely available. There is, however, an apparent lack of concerted effort to produce software systems for statistical analysis of genetic data compared with other fields of statistics. It ...

    Authors: Jing Hua Zhao and Qihua Tan
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:258
  20. The recent surge in mitochondrial research has been driven by the identification of mitochondria-associated diseases and the role of mitochondria in apoptosis. Both of these aspects have identified mitochondri...

    Authors: Ryan L Parr, Gabriel D Dakubo, Robert E Thayer, Keith McKenney and Mark A Birch-Machin
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:252
  21. Similar to other classical science disciplines, immunology has been embracing novel technologies and approaches giving rise to specialised sub-disciplines such as immunogenetics and, more recently, immunogenom...

    Authors: Marcos M Miretti and Stephan Beck
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:244
  22. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) encourages the development of new technologies such as microarrays which may improve and streamline assessments of safety and the effectiveness of medical products for...

    Authors: Živana Težak, Daya Ranamukhaarachchi, Estelle Russek-Cohen and Steven I Gutman
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:236
  23. The ability to infer personal genetic ancestry is being increasingly utilised in certain medical and forensic situations. Herein, the unsupervised Bayesian clustering algorithms structure, is employed to analyse ...

    Authors: Jayne E Ekins, Jacob B Ekins, Lara Layton, Luke AD Hutchison, Natalie M Myres and Scott R Woodward
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:212
  24. Recessively inherited phenotypes are frequent in the Palestinian population, as the result of a historical tradition of marriages within extended kindreds, particularly in isolated villages. In order to charac...

    Authors: Tom Walsh, Amal Abu Rayan, Judeh Abu Sa'ed, Hashem Shahin, Jeanne Shepshelovich, Ming K Lee, Koret Hirschberg, Mustafa Tekin, Wa'el Salhab, Karen B Avraham, Mary-Claire King and Moien Kanaan
    Citation: Human Genomics 2006 2:203
  25. The current proliferation of mammalian genomes is creating a nomenclature issue caused by naming genes based on their best BLAST hit to a gene in another annotated genome. The rat genome is relying heavily on ...

    Authors: David R. Nelson
    Citation: Human Genomics 2005 2:196
  26. This paper provides a brief overview of software currently available for the genetic analysis of quantitative traits in humans. Programs that implement variance components, Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC), Has...

    Authors: Laura Almasy and Diane M Warren
    Citation: Human Genomics 2005 2:191
  27. The available web-based genome data and related resources provide great opportunities for biomedical scientists to identify functional elements in a particular genome region or to explore the evolutionary patt...

    Authors: Xun Gu and Zhixi Su
    Citation: Human Genomics 2005 2:187
  28. Recombination and mutation have traditionally been regarded as independent evolutionary processes: the latter generates variation, which the former reshuffles. Recent studies, however, have suggested that alle...

    Authors: Matthew Hurles
    Citation: Human Genomics 2005 2:179
  29. Members of the NR1I subfamily of nuclear receptors play a role in the transcriptional activation of genes involved in drug metabolism and transport. NR1I3, the constitutive androstane receptor (CAR), mediates ...

    Authors: Emma E Thompson, Hala Kuttab-Boulos, Matthew D Krasowski and Anna Di Rienzo
    Citation: Human Genomics 2005 2:168

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