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1  a sickle S trait associated to heterozygous alpha thalassemia.
2 tions interfere with this mechanism to cause alpha thalassemia.
3 variant form of the inherited blood disorder alpha thalassemia.
4  the MCS-R2 alpha-globin enhancer and causes alpha-thalassemia.
5 istory of hemoglobin H disease, a subtype of alpha-thalassemia.
6 have previously established a mouse model of alpha-thalassemia.
7 % percent of these individuals who coinherit alpha-thalassemia.
8  X-linked mental retardation associated with alpha-thalassemia.
9 e 6 most frequently observed determinants of alpha-thalassemia.
10 for Hp, hemoglobin (Hb) S heterozygotes, and alpha(+)thalassemia.
11 nent condition characterizing Melanesians is alpha(+)-thalassemia.
12 evere malaria risk (HbAS polymorphism, 6.3%; alpha-thalassemia, 0.3%; ABO group, 0.3%; and glucose-6-
13 RBCs is increased when compared with HbH and alpha-thalassemia-1 trait RBCs.
14 le cell trait (10/218 [4.6%]) and homozygous alpha+thalassemia (8/216 [3.7%]) were significantly lowe
15 raction together with varying frequencies of alpha(+)thalassemia across Africa may explain the incons
16 a, where malaria transmission is intense and alpha+-thalassemia affects more than 90% of the populati
17 anism of the remarkable protective effect of alpha+-thalassemia against severe childhood disease rema
18 tudies are tractable in populations in which alpha-thalassemia alleles are prevalent.
19  (MDS) is complicated by an acquired form of alpha-thalassemia (alpha-thalassemia in myelodysplastic
20  patient with co-inheritance of heterozygous alpha + -thalassemia and sickle trait.
21 aphical correlation between the frequency of alpha+-thalassemia and the endemicity of Plasmodium falc
22 sociated with increased stroke risk, whereas alpha-thalassemia and a SNP in the ADCY9 gene were linke
23 population and when there is a variation for alpha-thalassemia and S, two unlinked, but epistatic var
24                      The mechanisms by which alpha-thalassemia and sickle cell traits confer protecti
25 CNN and XGBoost to two case studies: one for alpha-thalassemia and the other for beta-thalassemia.
26 tion of the hypotheses that G6PD deficiency, alpha+ thalassemia, and hemoglobin C protect against mal
27 e, cystic fibrosis, spinal muscular atrophy, alpha-thalassemia, and beta-thalassemia.
28  malaria season, MTD dose, fetal hemoglobin, alpha-thalassemia, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
29 es that lead to hemoglobin S, O blood group, alpha-thalassemia, and the Dantu blood group, are associ
30 me (BHFS) represents the most severe form of alpha-thalassemia, arising from deletion of the duplicat
31                                              alpha-Thalassemia (AT) is one of the most commonly occur
32 ollowed by the HBA1 and HBA2 gene mutations (Alpha Thalassemia) at a rate of about 1 in 25.
33 ividuals with myelodysplasia associated with alpha-thalassemia (ATMDS), somatic mutations of the gene
34  syndrome that is frequently associated with alpha thalassemia (ATR-X syndrome).
35 orm of intellectual disability combined with alpha-thalassemia called ATR-X syndrome in hemizygous ma
36 ing valuable therapeutic alternative such as alpha-thalassemias, congenital dyserythropoietic anemia,
37                            The -3.7-kilobase alpha-thalassemia deletion accounted for about one third
38                                  Presence of alpha-thalassemia deletions was associated with fewer DR
39 20.66; P = 8.63 x 10-95 to 6.19 x 10-5), and alpha-thalassemia deletions were significantly associate
40  nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), as well as alpha-thalassemia, G6PD A(-) variant deficiency, and bet
41 opulation is characterized by a frequency of alpha(+)-thalassemia >/=0.98, we have discovered the mut
42                   More than 100 varieties of alpha-thalassemia have been identified.
43                       Hb S heterozygotes and alpha(+)thalassemia homozygotes were protected from seve
44  0.40 (95% confidence interval 0.22-0.74) in alpha+-thalassemia homozygotes and 0.66 (0.37-1.20) in h
45 ene variants regulating fetal hemoglobin and alpha-thalassemia (important markers for SCD severity) w
46  0.48; 95% CI, 0.32-0.73, respectively), but alpha(+)thalassemia in combination with Hp2-2 was not pr
47 nificant interaction between Hp genotype and alpha(+)thalassemia in predicting risk of severe malaria
48 ed by an acquired form of alpha-thalassemia (alpha-thalassemia in myelodysplastic syndrome [ATMDS]) c
49                   In Vanuatu, paradoxically, alpha+-thalassemia increases the incidence of contractin
50 tion exhibited increased embryonic death and alpha-thalassemia intermedia.
51 idemiological surveys have demonstrated that alpha(+)-thalassemia is associated with increased suscep
52                                         When alpha-thalassemia is co-inherited with beta-thalassemia,
53                                              Alpha-thalassemia is very common throughout all tropical
54 lobin in beta thalassemia and beta-globin in alpha thalassemia leads to red blood cell hemolysis in t
55  insertion of a PGK-Neo cassette displays an alpha-thalassemia-like syndrome.
56 to reduced alpha-globin production and to an alpha-thalassemia-like syndrome.
57 on-dependent (TD) hereditary anemias such as alpha-thalassemia major are incontrovertible, the eviden
58             We report here the correction of alpha-thalassemia major hydrops fetalis in transgene-fre
59                  It is further proposed that alpha(+)-thalassemia may facilitate so-called "benign" P
60 in a severe genetic disorder termed X-linked alpha-thalassemia mental retardation (ATR-X) syndrome.
61             Mutational inactivation of ATRX (alpha-thalassemia mental retardation X-linked) represent
62    However, Sp100A cannot overcome Daxx- and alpha-thalassemia mental retardation, X-linked (ATRX)-me
63 dy, we characterize the Arabidopsis thaliana Alpha Thalassemia-mental Retardation X-linked (ATRX) ort
64 timulating, death-domain-associated protein, alpha thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome X linked,
65                                              Alpha thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked (
66 , mutations of the telomere binding proteins alpha thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked (
67                                              Alpha thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked c
68 log of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeler ATRX (Alpha Thalassemia/Mental Retardation Syndrome X-Linked),
69  (death-domain-associated protein) and ATRX (alpha thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked).
70  are the large N-terminal deletions of ATRX (Alpha Thalassemia/Mental Retardation, X-linked) that gen
71      Here, we found that the ND10 component, alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked (
72 F3A), isocitrate dehydrogenase 1/2 (IDH1/2), alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation, X-linked (ATRX), a
73 s (AQR), WRN, BLM, RTEL1, PIF1, FANCM, ATRX (alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation, X-linked), CasDinG
74 ase/ATPase that is mutated in ATRX syndrome (alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation, X-linked).
75 methylation (H3K9me3), and its reader, ATRX (alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation, X-linked).
76 s (.alpha/alpha alpha) and the deletion type alpha-thalassemia mice (../alpha alpha) produce severe h
77 Here, we identify the SWI/SNF helicase ATRX (alpha-thalassemia/MR, X-linked) as a novel macroH2A-inte
78 enced by the genetic background in which the alpha-thalassemia mutation resides [129(sv/ev)/129(sv/ev
79                          Naturally occurring alpha-thalassemia mutations that trigger aberrant splici
80  begun to recognize the more severe forms of alpha thalassemia, namely hemoglobin (Hb) H disease and
81    This mutation would ultimately compromise alpha(+)-thalassemia/P. vivax-mediated protection agains
82 distribution as a contributing factor to the alpha-thalassemia phenotype of ATRX syndrome.
83                            Here, we identify alpha-thalassemia retardation syndrome X-linked (ATRX) a
84 ning, diagnosis, and management suggest that alpha-thalassemias should have a higher priority on glob
85                              One patient had alpha-thalassemia sickle cell anemia.
86  and his father is a carrier of heterozygous alpha-thalassemia status that it was unknown before.
87 nenvironmental (eg, fetal hemoglobin levels, alpha-thalassemia status) factors are known to modify SC
88 ly, and the X-linked mental retardation with alpha-thalassemia syndrome, ATR-X.
89 e embryonic stem cells and created mice with alpha-thalassemia syndromes.
90 diseases, notably polycystic kidney disease, alpha-thalassemia, tuberous sclerosis, mental retardatio
91                      Fetuses with homozygous alpha-thalassemia usually die at the third trimester of
92 as well as heterozygotes for a nondeletional alpha thalassemia variant, and two other compound hetero
93 stinctly overhydrated relative to deletional alpha-thalassemia variants, and the derangement of volum
94  combination with heterozygous or homozygous alpha(+)thalassemia was associated with protection from
95 n one or two of the four alpha-globin genes (alpha-thalassemia) was associated with a lower prevalenc
96            Indeed, by using a mouse model of alpha-thalassemia, we find that its phenotype is strongl
97 in S, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and alpha-thalassemia) were the only ones to be associated w
98 d 99.34% accuracy on the private dataset for alpha thalassemia, while CNN reached 98.10% accuracy on
99 individual with an inherited form of anemia (alpha-thalassemia) who has a deletion that results in a
100 ath domain associated protein (Daxx) and the alpha-thalassemia X-linked mental retardation protein (A
101 ulated properly to prevent the occurrence of alpha-thalassemias, yet many questions remain unanswered

 
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