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Somatic mutations of esophageal adenocarcinoma: a comparison between Black and White patients. [PDF]
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Somatic Mutations in “Benign” Disease
New England Journal of Medicine, 2021Somatic Mutations in “Benign” Disease DNA mutations occur in nearly every tissue throughout the human life span and accumulate at various rates in different tissues according to intrinsic and extri...
Satu Mustjoki, Neal S. Young
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Review: Somatic mutations in neurodegeneration [PDF]
Somatic mutations are postzygotic mutations which may lead to mosaicism, the presence of cells with genetic differences in an organism. Their role in cancer is well established, but detailed investigation in health and other diseases has only been recently possible.
M. Leija‐Salazar+2 more
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Somatic mutations linked to osteoporosis [PDF]
A new study suggests that DNMT3A mutations associated with clonal haematopoiesis of indeterminate potential are linked to osteoporosis through IL-20-mediated osteoclastogenesis.
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Evidence of somatic mutations in osteoarthritis
Human Genetics, 1996We examined, cytogenetically and by in situ hybridization (ISH) techniques, the synovia, osteophytes, and articular cartilage from 32 patients with pronounced osteoarthritis (OA), a prevalent form of arthropathy characterized by progressive reduction of articular cartilage, and synovial samples from 17 control patients.
Felix Mitelman+9 more
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Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1998
ABSTRACT: A key prediction of the somatic mutation theory of aging is that there is an invariant relationship between life span and the number of random mutations. A number of studies at a number of gene loci have shown that somatic mutations of a variety of types accumulate with age.
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ABSTRACT: A key prediction of the somatic mutation theory of aging is that there is an invariant relationship between life span and the number of random mutations. A number of studies at a number of gene loci have shown that somatic mutations of a variety of types accumulate with age.
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Somatic mutations and proteins
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences, 1966A large body of data has now been accumulated concerning the ways in which heritable mutations can affect protein structure. Such mutations are usually presumed to arise in the germ line, and are studied by progeny analyses of various types.
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