Michael Schizas
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
3 Papers
9 Citations
Michael Schizas is an academic researcher from Albert Einstein College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Control of chromosome duplication & Haematopoiesis. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Complete genome phasing of family quartet by combination of genetic, physical and population-based phasing analysis.
Julien Lajugie,Rituparna Mukhopadhyay,Michael Schizas,Nathalie Lailler,Nicolas Fourel,Eric E. Bouhassira +5 more
TL;DR: A phasing method based on a combination of transmission analysis, physical phasing by pair-end sequencing of libraries of staggered sizes and population-based analysis that yielded phased genotypes of about 99.8% of the SNPs, indels and structural variants present in the quartet.
CXCR4+ Treg cells control serum IgM levels and natural IgM autoantibody production by B-1 cells in the bone marrow
Shlomo Elias,Rahul Sharma,Michael Schizas,Izabella Valdez,Sham Rampersaud,Sun-Mi Park,Paula Gonzalez-Figueroa,Quan Zhen Li,Beatrice Hoyos,Alexander Y. Rudensky +9 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors show that continuous expression of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 in Treg cells is required for their ability to accumulate in the bone marrow (BM).
Allele-specific genome-wide profiling in human primary erythroblasts reveal replication program organization.
Rituparna Mukhopadhyay,Julien Lajugie,Nicolas Fourel,Ari Selzer,Michael Schizas,Boris Bartholdy,Jessica C. Mar,Chii Mei Lin,Melvenia M. Martin,Michael T. Ryan,Mirit I. Aladjem,Eric E. Bouhassira +11 more
TL;DR: It is shown that the two chromosome homologs replicate at the same time in about 88% of the genome and that large structural variants are preferentially associated with asynchronous replication, suggesting that structural variants and parental imprinting are two causes of replication asynchrony in the human genome.