Postmortem Cortex Samples Identify Distinct Molecular Subtypes of ALS: Retrotransposon Activation, Oxidative Stress, and Activated Glia
The NYGC ALS Consortium
, Oliver H. Tam
, Nikolay V. Rozhkov
, Regina Shaw
, Duyang Kim
, Isabel Hubbard
, Samantha Fennessey
, Nadia Propp
, Hemali Phatnani
, Justin Kwan
, Dhruv Sareen
, James R. Broach
, Zachary Simmons
, Ximena Arcila-Londono
, Edward B. Lee
, Vivianna M. Van Deerlin
, Neil A. Shneider
, Ernest Fraenkel
, Lyle W. Ostrow
, Frank Baas
Noah Zaitlen, James D. Berry, Andrea Malaspina, Pietro Fratta, Gregory A. Cox, Leslie M. Thompson, Steve Finkbeiner, Efthimios Dardiotis, Timothy M. Miller, Siddharthan Chandran, Suvankar Pal, Eran Hornstein, Daniel J. MacGowan, Terry Heiman-Patterson, Molly G. Hammell, Nikolaos A. Patsopoulos, Oleg Butovsky, Joshua Dubnau, Avindra Nath, Robert Bowser, Matt Harms, Eleonora Aronica, Mary Poss, Jennifer Phillips-Cremins, John Crary, Nazem Atassi, Dale J. Lange, Darius J. Adams, Leonidas Stefanis, Marc Gotkine, Robert Baloh
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