Virally delivered CMYA5 enhances the assembly of cardiac dyads
Fujian Lu(Boston Children's Hospital), William T. Pu(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Michael A. Trembley(Boston Children's Hospital), Carter Liou(Boston Children's Hospital), Kevin Kit Parker(Harvard University), Maksymilian Prondzynski(University of British Columbia), Shu‐Tao Xia(Tsinghua University), Yu Xia(Hubei University), Qing Ma(Boston Children's Hospital), Kenneth Bedi(University of Pennsylvania), Bingqing Xue(Hubei University), Raul Hernandes Bortolin(Boston Children's Hospital), Wenjun Xie(First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University), Kevin Shani(Harvard University), Paul Berkson(Boston Children's Hospital), Donghui Zhang(Hubei University), Xiaoran Zhang(Boston Children's Hospital), Zexuan Wu(Boston Children's Hospital), Francisco J. Naya(Boston University), Anna Ponek(Boston Children's Hospital), Kenneth B. Margulies(Temple University)
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