Results 211 to 220 of about 422,101 (237)
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The human Y chromosome: a masculine chromosome

Current Opinion in Genetics & Development, 2006
Once considered to be a genetic wasteland of no scientific interest beyond sex determination, the human Y chromosome has made a significant comeback in the past few decades and is currently implicated in multiple diseases, including spermatogenic failure - absent or very low levels of sperm production.
Michiel J. Noordam, Sjoerd Repping
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Human Chromosomes and Opiates

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1972
A cytogenic study of 16 opiate addicts receiving methadone hydrochloride compared with a control population revealed an unusual number of chromosome aberrations including dicentric chromosomes and an exchange figure at 72 hours in the addicted group, but no significant increase in chromosome anomalies over the controls at 48 hours. To determine whether
Rusha B. Jordan   +4 more
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Chromosomes and Chromosomal Instability in Human Cancer [PDF]

open access: possible, 2016
Human cancers show chromosome abnormalities, some of which are frequent and specific cytogenetic changes associated with certain forms of cancer. The most striking findings are nonrandom chromosomal changes in human hematologic neoplasia. Specific cytogenetic changes are associated with the diagnosis of leukemia, clinical implications, and prognosis ...
Kazuma Ohyashiki   +2 more
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Distribution of spontaneous chromosome breaks in human chromosomes

Human Genetics, 1976
Localization of chromosome breaks in human chromosomes was analyzed in 264 peripheral lymphocyte cultures. Three hundred and sixty-nine chromosome breaks could be exactly localized to a chromosome band or region of the Paris Conference nomenclature. The distribution of breaks in the chromosome regions was found to be nonrandom.
Pertti Aula, von Koskull H
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Mapping of Human Chromosomes [PDF]

open access: possible, 1980
The mapping of human chromosomes is progressing so rapidly that it is no longer possible to maintain an up-to-date catalog in book form. The standard listing of human genes, Victor A. McKusick’s Mendelian Inheritance in Man, has been published in nine editions since its first appearance in 1966.
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Chromosome Abnormalities in Human Sperm

1985
The ability to analyze human sperm chromosome complements after penetration of zona pellucida-free hamster eggs provides the first opportunity to study the frequency and type of chromosomal abnormalities in human gametes. Two large-scale studies have provided information on normal men.
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Mapping Human Chromosomes

2001
A central problem in cytogenetics is mapping the location of each gene. This involves determining their linear order and the physical distance and frequency of meiotic recombination between all components of each chromosome, especially the genes. The rate of progress in mapping the human chromosomes has increased rapidly.
Eeva Therman, Orlando J. Miller
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Human Somatic Chromosomes

Nature, 1958
L. G. Lajtha   +3 more
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Human Chromosome Nomenclature

1999
Advancements in methodology and discovery of the diploid human chromosome number invigorated further research in human cytogenetics (1,2). The eventful years that followed witnessed the birth of a new specialty—human cytogenetics—which provided answers to many intriguing phenomena in medicine.
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