Philip Riley
1 Papers
Philip Riley is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome-wide association study & Genetic association. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Contribution of rare and predicted pathogenic gene variants to childhood-onset lupus: a large, genetic panel analysis of British and French cohorts
Alexandre Belot,Gillian I. Rice,Sulliman Ommar Omarjee,Quentin Rouchon,Eve M D Smith,Marion Moreews,Maud Tusseau,Cécile Frachette,Raphael Bournhonesque,Nicole M. Thielens,Christine Gaboriaud,Isabelle Rouvet,Emilie Chopin,Akihiro Hoshino,Sylvain Latour,Sylvain Latour,Bruno Ranchin,Rolando Cimaz,Paula Romagnani,Christophe Malcus,Nicole Fabien,Marie-Nathalie Sarda,Behrouz Kassai,Jean-Christophe Lega,Stéphane Decramer,Pauline Abou-Jaoude,Ian N. Bruce,Ian N. Bruce,Thomas Simonet,Claire Bardel,Pierre Antoine Rollat-Farnier,Sébastien Viel,Héloïse Reumaux,James O'Sullivan,Thierry Walzer,Anne-Laure Mathieu,Gaëlle Marenne,Thomas Ludwig,Emmanuelle Génin,Jamie M Ellingford,Brigitte Bader-Meunier,Tracy A Briggs,Tracy A Briggs,Michael W. Beresford,Yanick J. Crow,Yanick J. Crow,Dominique Campion,Jean-François Dartigues,Jean-François Deleuze,Jean-Charles Lambert,Richard Redon,Emma Allain-Launay,Kenza Bouayed,Stéphane Burtey,Aurélia Carbasse,V. Despert,Olivier Fain,Michel Fischbach,Hugues Flodrops,Caroline Galeotti,Eric Hachulla,Yves Hatchuel,Jean-Francois Kleinmann,Isabelle Koné-Paut,Aurélia Lanteri,Irène Lemelle,Hélène Maillard,François Maurier,Ulrich Meinzer,Isabelle Melki,Sandrine Morell-Dubois,Anne Pagnier,Maryam Piram,Charlotte Samaille,Jean Sibilia,Olivia Weill,Eslam Al-Abadi,Kate Armon,Kathryn Bailey,Michael Beresford,Mary Brennan,Coziana Ciurtin,Janet Gardner-Medwin,Kirsty Haslam,Daniel Hawley,Alice Leahy,Valentina Leone,Devesh Mewar,Robert J. Moots,Clarissa Pilkington,Athimalaipet V Ramanan,Satyapal Rangaraj,Annie Ratcliffe,Philip Riley,Ethan Sen,Arani Sridhar,Nick Wilkinson,Fiona Wood +97 more
- 01 Feb 2020
TL;DR: An accumulation of rare variants that are predicted to be damaging in SLE-associated genes might contribute to disease expression and clinical heterogeneity.