posted on 2011-12-30, 16:49authored byParastoo Momeni, Jennifer Schymick, Shushant Jain, Mark R Cookson, Nigel J Cairns, Elisa Greggio, Matthew J Greenway, Stephen Berger, Stuart Pickering-Brown, Adriano Chiò, Hon Chung Fung, David M Holtzman, Edward D Huey, Eric M Wassermann, Jennifer Adamson, Michael L Hutton, Ekaterina Rogaeva, Peter St George-Hyslop, Jeffrey D Rothstein, Orla Hardiman, Jordan Grafman, Andrew Singleton, John Hardy, Bryan J Traynor
Copyright information:
Taken from "Analysis of as a candidate gene for chromosome 9p-linked ALS-FTD"
BMC Neurology 2006;6():44-44.
Published online 13 Dec 2006
PMCID:PMC1764752.
(A) ideogram of chromosome 9 showing the linked areas defined by Morita et al, Vance et al and Yan et al in 2006. The shared region flanked by D9S1678 and D9S2154 is shaded in grey. (B) Schematic representation of the known genes and predicted transcripts in the area shared by the Dutch, Scandinavian and North American families. In red, IFT74 where sequence variants associated with ALS-FTD, ALS and FTD were identified.