DNA haplotype analysis of Huntington disease reveals clues to the origins and mechanisms of CAG expansion and reasons for geographic variations of prevalence
Ferdinando Squitieri(University of British Columbia), Michael R. Hayden(Family Research Institute), Niamh Spence(University of British Columbia), G. Napolitano, Jacquie Greenberg(University of Cape Town), Binshan Lin(University of British Columbia), Jane Theilmann(University of British Columbia), Kenneth Morgan(Montreal General Hospital), Jun Goto(Kumamoto University), K. Nichol(University of British Columbia), B Kremer(University of British Columbia), Maria Anvret(Karolinska University Hospital), J. Vesa(Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland), Susan E. Andrew(Medical Genetics Center), Leena Peltonen(University of Helsinki), E. Almqvist(Karolinska Institutet), Y. Paul Goldberg(Agile Therapeutics (United States)), H. Telenius(University of British Columbia), Ichiro Kanazawa(National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry), J. Zelsler(University of British Columbia)
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