Haemophilia A (HA) and B (HB) as well as factor VII (FVII) or X (FX) deficiencies are well-characterized haemorragic genetic disorders, whose etiology, even at the molecular level, has been extensively described. Treatment options for patients affected by these diseases are currently available and mainly consist of replacement therapy with the missing factor. However, there are still important limitations and research in the field is boosted towards the implementation of current therapeutic options or the discovery of innovative procedures. In the present work we aimed at providing consistent examples of novel treatment strategies for bleeding disorders, via protein engineering or pharmacological approaches. The different systems here prop...
BACKGROUND: Nonsense mutations in coagulation factor (F) VII potentially cause a lethal hemorrhagic ...
Hemophilia is caused by various mutations in blood coagulation factor genes, including factor VIII (...
Haemophilia A is a genetic X-linked disorder, characterized by coagulation Factor VIII (FVIII) defi...
Hemophilia A (HA) and hemophilia B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders due to inheritable deficienc...
Hemophilias A and B are X chromosome-linked bleeding disorders, which are mainly treated by repeated...
This review will focus on new technologies in development that promise to lead to further advances i...
Factor VII (FVII) gene, homologous to the X−linked factor IX gene, has a pivotal role in the initiat...
For decades, the monogenetic bleeding disorders hemophilia A and B (coagulation factor VIII and IX d...
Background Amino acid substitutions caused by missense mutations, representing the most frequent ge...
Recombinant DNA technology has led to accelerating introduction of novel therapeutics for the treatm...
Factor VIII (FVIII) functions as a cofactor within the intrinsic pathway of blood co-agulation. Quan...
In the last decades, enormous efforts have been pushed toward the development of molecular therapeu...
Hemophilia is a genetic disease caused by a deficiency of one of the coagulation proteins. The term ...
The gene mutations leading to hemorrhagic disorders provide peculiar models to elucidate molecular m...
BACKGROUND: Nonsense mutations in coagulation factor (F) VII potentially cause a lethal hemorrhagic ...
BACKGROUND: Nonsense mutations in coagulation factor (F) VII potentially cause a lethal hemorrhagic ...
Hemophilia is caused by various mutations in blood coagulation factor genes, including factor VIII (...
Haemophilia A is a genetic X-linked disorder, characterized by coagulation Factor VIII (FVIII) defi...
Hemophilia A (HA) and hemophilia B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders due to inheritable deficienc...
Hemophilias A and B are X chromosome-linked bleeding disorders, which are mainly treated by repeated...
This review will focus on new technologies in development that promise to lead to further advances i...
Factor VII (FVII) gene, homologous to the X−linked factor IX gene, has a pivotal role in the initiat...
For decades, the monogenetic bleeding disorders hemophilia A and B (coagulation factor VIII and IX d...
Background Amino acid substitutions caused by missense mutations, representing the most frequent ge...
Recombinant DNA technology has led to accelerating introduction of novel therapeutics for the treatm...
Factor VIII (FVIII) functions as a cofactor within the intrinsic pathway of blood co-agulation. Quan...
In the last decades, enormous efforts have been pushed toward the development of molecular therapeu...
Hemophilia is a genetic disease caused by a deficiency of one of the coagulation proteins. The term ...
The gene mutations leading to hemorrhagic disorders provide peculiar models to elucidate molecular m...
BACKGROUND: Nonsense mutations in coagulation factor (F) VII potentially cause a lethal hemorrhagic ...
BACKGROUND: Nonsense mutations in coagulation factor (F) VII potentially cause a lethal hemorrhagic ...
Hemophilia is caused by various mutations in blood coagulation factor genes, including factor VIII (...
Haemophilia A is a genetic X-linked disorder, characterized by coagulation Factor VIII (FVIII) defi...