Results 251 to 260 of about 144,968 (305)
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Immunological Tolerance within the ABO Blood Group System*
British Journal of Haematology, 1959Marjorie Pinder+3 more
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A-Elute alleles of the ABO blood group system in Japanese
Legal Medicine, 2003The ABO blood group system is important in forensic genetics, as well as transfusion medicine. Since the elucidation of the molecular basis of ABO gene regulation, nucleotides of variant alleles or suballeles have been analyzed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based methods and sequencing. Ael (A-elute) is one of the subgroups of A in the ABO system.
Koji Nishimura+5 more
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Interallelic Competition and Complementation in the ABO Blood Group System
Immunological Communications, 1980By means of quantitative agglutination, the results of interactions of A subgroup and variant genes with the B gene, as well as interactions of the Bx allele with A1, A2 and O genes in their heterozygous combination, are demonstrated. In the majority of interactions, competition occurs according to the rule that the allele producing the more active ...
Hrubisko M+4 more
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A note on the likelihood equation in the ABO blood group system
Annals of Human Genetics, 1978Some sufficient conditions on the data for the likelihood equation of the ABO blood-group system to have a unique solution, the maximum-likelihood estimate, are given. The simplest of these conditions is that the frequency of the blood group O in the sample shall exceed 1/8. This condition will hold for most samples.
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ABO histo-blood group system-incompatible allografting
International Immunopharmacology, 2005Most of the 29 blood group systems known today are not restricted to erythroid tissues hence their more recent identification as histo-blood group systems. Beyond the uncontested importance of the HLA system in human allograft survival, some of the histo-blood group systems might increasingly become recognised to play a role in graft-host interaction ...
Thierry Carrel+5 more
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INHERITED ‘MOSAICISM’ WITHIN THE ABO BLOOD GROUP SYSTEM
International Journal of Immunogenetics, 1978SUMMARYA family with examples of the rare condition known as ‘inherited mosaicism affecting the ABO blood groups’ has been studied. In this family there were five examples of Bmos:O mosaicism. Blood group gene‐specified transferase estimations were studied in this condition for the first time.
G. W. G. Bird+4 more
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, 2014
6 Abstract: The current study was carried out on 550 healthy population having 250 males and 300 females. Five ml venousblood was collected following standard biosafety measures. ABO blood grouping was done by Tile method and found blood group B dominant
S. Sherwani+6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
6 Abstract: The current study was carried out on 550 healthy population having 250 males and 300 females. Five ml venousblood was collected following standard biosafety measures. ABO blood grouping was done by Tile method and found blood group B dominant
S. Sherwani+6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
A microplate system for ABO and Rh(D) blood grouping
Transfusion, 1993A microplate system for performing ABO and Rh(D) blood group determinations with a Kemble Kemtek 1000SP liquid handling processor, an Anthos 2001 microplate reader, an IBM Personal System 2 microcomputer, and Sanguin Forma software is described. The performance of this Kemble/Anthos/IBM/Sanguin microplate system for ABO and D grouping was evaluated by ...
K Ilagan, P Birch, A. Chung
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Transfusion Medicine and Hemotherapy
Background and Summary: We review the transcriptional regulation of ABO expression and discuss variants in the promoter and erythroid cell-specific regulatory region in individuals with weak ABO phenotypes such as Bm, Am, B3, and A3.
Kenichi Ogasawara, R. Sano, Y. Kominato
semanticscholar +1 more source
Background and Summary: We review the transcriptional regulation of ABO expression and discuss variants in the promoter and erythroid cell-specific regulatory region in individuals with weak ABO phenotypes such as Bm, Am, B3, and A3.
Kenichi Ogasawara, R. Sano, Y. Kominato
semanticscholar +1 more source
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications - BBRC, 1997
The Bombay phenotype fails to express the ABH antigens of ABO blood group system on red blood cells and in secretions because of a lack in activities of the H gene (FUT1)- and Secretor gene (FUT2)-encoded alpha (1,2)fucosyltransferases. In this study, we
Y. Koda+4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Bombay phenotype fails to express the ABH antigens of ABO blood group system on red blood cells and in secretions because of a lack in activities of the H gene (FUT1)- and Secretor gene (FUT2)-encoded alpha (1,2)fucosyltransferases. In this study, we
Y. Koda+4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source