Daniel Woo
National Institutes of Health
1 Papers
44 Citations
Daniel Woo is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Single-nucleotide polymorphism & Locus (genetics). The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Alpha-T-catenin is expressed in human brain and interacts with the Wnt signaling pathway but is not responsible for linkage to chromosome 10 in Alzheimer's disease
Victoria L. Busby,Steven Goossens,Petra Nowotny,Gillian Hamilton,Scott Smemo,Denise Harold,D. Turic,Luke Jehu,Amanda J. Myers,Meredith Womick,Daniel Woo,Danielle Compton,Lisa Doil,Kristina Tacey,Kit Lau,Safa Al-Saraj,Richard Killick,Stuart Pickering-Brown,Pamela Moore,Paul Hollingworth,Nicola Archer,Catherine Foy,Sarah Walter,C. Lendon,Takeshi Iwatsubo,John C. Morris,Joanne Norton,David M. A. Mann,Barbara Janssens,John Hardy,Michael Conlon O'Donovan,Lesley Jones,Julie Williams,Peter Holmans,Michael John Owen,Andrew Grupe,John Powell,Jolanda van Hengel,Alison Goate,Frans van Roy,Simon Lovestone +40 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that CTNNA3 is unlikely to account for the AD susceptibility locus on chromosome 10, and like other α-catenins, it inhibits Wnt signaling and is therefore also a functional candidate.
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