SummaryDYT1 dystonia is a neurodevelopmental disease that manifests during a discrete period of childhood. The disease is caused by impaired function of torsinA, a protein linked to nuclear membrane budding. The relationship of NE budding to neural development and CNS function is unclear, however, obscuring its potential role in dystonia pathogenesis. We find NE budding begins and resolves during a discrete neurodevelopmental window in torsinA null neurons in vivo. The developmental resolution of NE budding corresponds to increased torsinB protein, while ablating torsinB from torsinA null neurons prevents budding resolution and causes lethal neural dysfunction. Developmental changes in torsinB also correlate with NE bud formation in differe...
SummaryA previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules ...
A previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules exit th...
Heterozygosity for a 3-base pair deletion (DGAG) in TOR1A/torsinA is one of the most common causes o...
DYT1 dystonia is a neurodevelopmental disease that manifests during a discrete period of childhood. ...
Dystonia is the third most common movement disorder with a prevalence of 48.5 cases per 100000. Desp...
SummaryAn enigmatic feature of many genetic diseases is that mutations in widely expressed genes cau...
Mutations in torsinA cause dominantly inherited early-onset torsion dystonia in humans. In this issu...
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are large multiprotein assemblies essential for macromolecular transpo...
AbstractTorsinA is the causative protein in the human neurologic disease early onset torsin dystonia...
A three base-pair deletion in the widely expressed TOR1A gene causes the childhood onset, neurologic...
The goal of my dissertation work was to examine the systems biology of torsinA, a DYT1 dystonia-asso...
DYT1 dystonia is caused by mutation of the TOR1A gene, resulting in the loss of a single glutamic ac...
A GAG deletion in the gene (TOR1A) for torsinA is associated with childhood-onset generalized dyston...
Early-onset torsion dystonia (DYT1) is an autosomal-dominant movement disorder characterized by sust...
A previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules exit th...
SummaryA previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules ...
A previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules exit th...
Heterozygosity for a 3-base pair deletion (DGAG) in TOR1A/torsinA is one of the most common causes o...
DYT1 dystonia is a neurodevelopmental disease that manifests during a discrete period of childhood. ...
Dystonia is the third most common movement disorder with a prevalence of 48.5 cases per 100000. Desp...
SummaryAn enigmatic feature of many genetic diseases is that mutations in widely expressed genes cau...
Mutations in torsinA cause dominantly inherited early-onset torsion dystonia in humans. In this issu...
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are large multiprotein assemblies essential for macromolecular transpo...
AbstractTorsinA is the causative protein in the human neurologic disease early onset torsin dystonia...
A three base-pair deletion in the widely expressed TOR1A gene causes the childhood onset, neurologic...
The goal of my dissertation work was to examine the systems biology of torsinA, a DYT1 dystonia-asso...
DYT1 dystonia is caused by mutation of the TOR1A gene, resulting in the loss of a single glutamic ac...
A GAG deletion in the gene (TOR1A) for torsinA is associated with childhood-onset generalized dyston...
Early-onset torsion dystonia (DYT1) is an autosomal-dominant movement disorder characterized by sust...
A previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules exit th...
SummaryA previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules ...
A previously unrecognized mechanism through which large ribonucleoprotein (megaRNP) granules exit th...
Heterozygosity for a 3-base pair deletion (DGAG) in TOR1A/torsinA is one of the most common causes o...