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Author Title [ Type(Desc)] Year
Filters: Author is Durr, A.  [Clear All Filters]
Journal Article
Boukhris, A., Schule, R., Loureiro, J. L., Lourenço, C. M., et al. (2013). Alteration of ganglioside biosynthesis responsible for complex hereditary spastic paraplegia. American Journal of Human Genetics, 93(1), 118 - 123.
Anheim, M., Monga, B., Fleury, M., Charles, P., et al. (2009). Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2: Clinical, biological and genotype/phenotype correlation study of a cohort of 90 patients. Brain, 132(10), 2688 - 2698.
Bettencourt, C., Hensman-Moss, D., Flower, M., Wiethoff, S., et al. (2016). DNA repair pathways underlie a common genetic mechanism modulating onset in polyglutamine diseases. Annals of Neurology, 79(6), 983 - 990.
Esteves, T., Durr, A., Mundwiller, E., Loureiro, J. L., et al. (2014). Loss of association of REEP2 with membranes leads to hereditary spastic paraplegia. American Journal of Human Genetics, 94(2), 268 - 277.
Martin, E., Schüle, R., Smets, K., Rastetter, A., et al. (2013). Loss of function of glucocerebrosidase GBA2 is responsible for motor neuron defects in hereditary spastic paraplegia. American Journal of Human Genetics, 92(2), 238 - 244.
Stevanin, G., Santorelli, F. M., Azzedine, H., Coutinho, P., et al. (2007). Mutations in SPG11, encoding spatacsin, are a major cause of spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum. Nature Genetics, 39(3), 366 - 372.

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