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Transcriptome-wide association study of Alzheimer disease reveals many differentially expressed genes and multiple biological pathways in brain tissue from African American donors

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Logue, MW; Labadorf, A; O’Neill, NK; Dickson, DW; Dugger, BN; Flanagan, ME; Frosch, MP; Gearing, M; Jin, L-W; Kofler, J; Mayeux, R; McKee, A ...
November 4, 2024

Duke Scholars

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Publication Date

November 4, 2024
 

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Logue, M. W., Labadorf, A., O’Neill, N. K., Dickson, D. W., Dugger, B. N., Flanagan, M. E., … Farrer, L. A. (2024). Transcriptome-wide association study of Alzheimer disease reveals many differentially expressed genes and multiple biological pathways in brain tissue from African American donors. openRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.10.29.24316311
Logue, Mark W., Adam Labadorf, Nicholas K. O’Neill, Dennis W. Dickson, Brittany N. Dugger, Margaret E. Flanagan, Matthew P. Frosch, et al. “Transcriptome-wide association study of Alzheimer disease reveals many differentially expressed genes and multiple biological pathways in brain tissue from African American donors.” OpenRxiv, November 4, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.10.29.24316311.
Logue MW, Labadorf A, O’Neill NK, Dickson DW, Dugger BN, Flanagan ME, Frosch MP, Gearing M, Jin L-W, Kofler J, Mayeux R, McKee A, Miller CA, Murray ME, Nelson PT, Perrin RJ, Schneider JA, Stein TD, Teich AF, Troncoso JC, Wang S-H, Wolozin B, Mez J, Farrer LA. Transcriptome-wide association study of Alzheimer disease reveals many differentially expressed genes and multiple biological pathways in brain tissue from African American donors. openRxiv. 2024.

DOI

Publication Date

November 4, 2024