Gut microbiome-dependent IL-1 signaling is a mediator of ACVR1 <sup>R206H</sup> -driven heterotopic ossification
Hannah Herzog(University of California, San Francisco), Edward C. Hsiao(Gladstone Institutes), Chhedi Lal Gupta(Indian Veterinary Research Institute), Ariane Zamarioli(Universidade de São Paulo), Natasha K. Hunt(University of California, San Francisco), Jessica L. Pierce(Emory University), Christopher J. Hernandez(University of California, San Francisco), Lily Lam(University of California, San Francisco), Kelly L. Wentworth(San Francisco General Hospital), Daniel S. Perrien(Emory University), Svetlana Lyalina(Gladstone Institutes), Sarah W. Takimoto(University of California, Los Angeles), Kristie B. Yu(University of California, Los Angeles), Vivian Lu(Central Michigan University), Ethan Dinh(University of California, San Francisco), Katherine Jin(University of California, San Francisco), Camille Fang(University of California, San Francisco), Susan Lynch(UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital), Michael S Hohl(Emory University), Isadora Isadora Mamikunian(University of California, San Francisco), Tania Moody(University of California, San Francisco), Aditi Sharma(University of California, San Francisco), Katherine S. Pollard(Gladstone Institutes)
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