The neuronal sortilin-related receptor SORL1 is genetically associated with Alzheimer disease
Ekaterina Rogaeva(University of Toronto), Yan Meng(Boston University), Joseph H. Lee(Columbia University), Yongjun Gu(University of Toronto), Toshitaka Kawarai(University of Toronto), Fanggeng Zou(Jacksonville College), Taiichi Katayama(University of Toronto), Clinton T. Baldwin(Boston University), Rong Cheng(Columbia University), Hiroshi Hasegawa(University of Toronto), Fusheng Chen(University of Toronto), Nobuto Shibata(University of Toronto), Kathryn L. Lunetta(Boston University), Raphaëlle Pardossi‐Piquard(University of Toronto), Christopher Böhm(University of Toronto), Yosuke Wakutani(University of Toronto), L. Adrienne Cupples(Boston University), Karen T. Cuenco(Boston University), Robert C. Green(Boston University), Lorenzo Pinessi(University of Turin), Innocenzo Rainero(University of Turin), Sandro Sorbi(University of Florence), Amalia C. Bruni(BioAge (Italy)), Ranjan Duara(Mount Sinai Medical Center), Robert P. Friedland(Case Western Reserve University), Rivka Inzelberg, Wolfgang Hampe(University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf), Hideaki Bujo(Chiba University), You‐Qiang Song(University of Hong Kong), Olav M. Andersen(Max Delbrück Center), Thomas E. Willnow(Max Delbrück Center), Neill R. Graff‐Radford(Jacksonville College), Ronald Petersen(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Dennis W. Dickson(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Sandy D. Der(Toronto Western Hospital), Paul E. Fraser(Toronto Western Hospital), Gerold Schmitt‐Ulms(Toronto Western Hospital), Steven G. Younkin(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Richard Mayeux(Columbia University), Lindsay A. Farrer(Boston University), Peter St George‐Hyslop(Toronto Western Hospital)
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