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Dive into the research topics where Shom Shanker Bhattacharya is active.

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Featured researches published by Shom Shanker Bhattacharya.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Clinical features, molecular genetics, and pathophysiology of dominant optic atrophy.

Marcela Votruba; Anthony T. Moore; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

Inherited optic neuropathies are a significant cause of childhood and adult blindness and dominant optic atrophy (DOA) is the most common form of autosomally inherited (non-glaucomatous) optic neuropathy. Patients with DOA present with an insidious onset of bilateral visual loss and they characteristically have temporal optic nerve pallor, centrocaecal visual field scotoma, and a colour vision deficit, which is frequently blue-yellow. Evidence from histological and electrophysiological studies suggests that the pathology is confined to the retinal ganglion cell. A gene for dominant optic atrophy (OPA1) has been mapped to chromosome 3q28-qter, and studies are under way to refine the genetic interval in which the gene lies, to map the region physically, and hence to clone the gene. A second locus for dominant optic atrophy has recently been shown to map to chromosome 18q12.2-12.3 near the Kidd blood group locus. The cloning of genes for dominant optic atrophy will provide important insights into the pathophysiology of the retinal ganglion cell in health and disease. These insights may prove to be of great value in the understanding of other primary ganglion cell diseases, such as the mitochondrially inherited Lebers hereditary optic neuropathy and other diseases associated with ganglion cell loss, such as glaucoma.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2003

Optic disc morphology of patients with OPA1 autosomal dominant optic atrophy

Marcela Votruba; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

Background/aims: Patients with autosomal dominant optic atrophy (ADOA) are genetically heterogeneous, but all have disc pallor. A degree of cupping in ADOA can make the distinction from normal tension glaucoma (NTG) clinically difficult. This study aimed to clarify the features of the optic nerve of patients with ADOA at the OPA1 locus. Methods: 29 patients (58 eyes), from 12 families, were identified in a prospective observational study of patients with ADOA examined by a single observer between 1995 and 1998, in whom genetic analysis showed either evidence for linkage to chromosome 3q28 or mutations in the ADOA gene, OPA1. All of the patients had disc and fundal photographs available for retrospective analysis. Clinical data collected included disc appearance, intraocular pressure, Snellen visual acuity, Hardy-Rand-Rittler colour vision plates, and Humphrey 30-2 visual fields. Results: Mean age at time of examination was 37 years and mean visual acuity was 6/24. Disc morphology showed temporal disc pallor in 30 eyes (52%) and total disc pallor in 28 eyes (48%). At least one disc showed a cup to disc ratio of more than 0.5 in 18 patients (28 discs, 48%). The temporal neuroretinal rim always showed pallor and shallow shelving (or saucerisation) was seen in 46 eyes (79%). Only 12 discs (21%) had deep excavation and baring of blood vessels. All of the patients had normal intraocular pressure and no family history of glaucoma. There was a temporal grey, pigmentary crescent in 12 patients (18 eyes, 31%) and peripapillary atrophy in 20 patients (40 eyes, 69%), but disc margin haemorrhages were not seen. There was no maculopathy or retinopathy. Conclusion: The optic disc morphology, described for the first time in this genetically homogeneous population of patients with OPA1 ADOA, shows a distinctive absence of a healthy neuroretinal rim and shallow saucerisation of the optic disc cup, with frequent peripapillary atrophy.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1997

Genetic refinement of dominant optic atrophy (OPA1) locus to within a 2 cM interval of chromosome 3q.

Marcela Votruba; Anthony T. Moore; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

Autosomal dominant optic atrophy (OPA, MIM 165500) is an eye disease characterised by variable optic atrophy and reduction in visual acuity. It has an insidious onset in the first decade of life and is clinically highly heterogeneous. It is associated with a centrocecal scotoma of varying size and density and an acquired blue-yellow dyschromatopsia. Recent studies of three large Danish pedigrees have mapped a gene for dominant optic atrophy (OPA1) to a 10 cM region on chromosome 3q, between markers D3S1314 and D3S1265 (3q28-qter). Genetic linkage analysis in five British pedigrees confirms mapping to chromosome 3q28-qter. Haplotype analysis of a seven generation pedigree positions the disease causing gene between loci D3S3590 and D3S1305, corresponding to a genetic distance of 2 cM. This represents a significant linkage refinement and should facilitate positional cloning of the disease gene.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2007

British family with early-onset Fuchs’ endothelial corneal dystrophy associated with p.L450W mutation in the COL8A2 gene

Petra Liskova; Quincy Prescott; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya; Stephen J. Tuft

Endothelial dystrophies produce characteristic morphological and functional abnormalities of the cornea. The most prevalent is Fuchs’ endothelial corneal dystrophy (FECD), which is characterized by bilateral primary cornea guttata and a reduced endothelial cell density that can result in corneal oedema, discomfort, and blurred vision. Histology shows a thickened Descemet’s membrane with focal posterior excrescences and endothelial cell loss. The onset of FECD is typically in the fifth decade of life,1 but an early-onset variant has been described that shows phenotypic differences from the more common late-onset disease.2 3 A genome-wide search of a three-generation family with early-onset FECD identified a locus on chromosome 1p34.3–p32.2 Within this locus a pathogenic mutation p.Q455K was found in the COL8A2 gene in this and two …


Neuroradiology | 2000

MRI of the intraorbital optic nerve in patients with autosomal dominant optic atrophy

Marcela Votruba; S. Leary; N. Losseff; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya; Anthony T. Moore; D. H. Miller; I. Moseley

Abstract Measurements of the intraorbital optic nerve were made using high-resolution coronal MRI in 10 adults with autosomal dominant optic atrophy. Comparisons were made with previous studies of 10 normal adult subjects. The cross-sectional diameters of the optic nerve and the perineural subarachnoid space were measured and a ratio of there diameters at anterior, mid and posterior positions along the optic nerve was determined. We found a statistically significant difference in the mean optic nerve: sheath ratio between the control group and patients with autosomal dominant optic atrophy. At anterior, mid and posterior locations along the optic nerve it is significantly smaller in patients with optic atrophy. We have demonstrated that the loss of ganglion cells, previously documented in dominant optic atrophy, is associated with a significant loss of optic nerve tissue and thinning of the nerve along its length.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Transcriptional regulation of PRPF31 gene expression by MSR1 repeat elements causes incomplete penetrance in retinitis pigmentosa

Anna M. Rose; Amna Z. Shah; Giulia Venturini; Abhay Krishna; Aravinda Chakravarti; Carlo Rivolta; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

PRPF31-associated retinitis pigmentosa presents a fascinating enigma: some mutation carriers are blind, while others are asymptomatic. We identify the major molecular cause of this incomplete penetrance through three cardinal features: (1) there is population variation in the number (3 or 4) of a minisatellite repeat element (MSR1) adjacent to the PRPF31 core promoter; (2) in vitro, 3-copies of the MSR1 element can repress gene transcription by 50 to 115-fold; (3) the higher-expressing 4-copy allele is not observed among symptomatic PRPF31 mutation carriers and correlates with the rate of asymptomatic carriers in different populations. Thus, a linked transcriptional modifier decreases PRPF31 gene expression that leads to haploinsufficiency. This result, taken with other identified risk alleles, allows precise genetic counseling for the first time. We also demonstrate that across the human genome, the presence of MSR1 repeats in the promoters or first introns of genes is associated with greater population variability in gene expression indicating that copy number variation of MSR1s is a generic controller of gene expression and promises to provide new insights into our understanding of gene expression regulation.


Mammalian Genome | 1998

Dominant optic atrophy: exclusion and fine genetic mapping of the candidate gene, HRY

Marcela Votruba; Annette Payne; Anthony T. Moore; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

Abstract. Autosomal dominant optic atrophy (OPA1) maps to Chromosome (Chr) 3q28, and the disease interval has been refined to within 1.4 cM, flanked by the markers D3S3669 and D3S3562. HRY, the human homolog of the Drosophila segmentation gene, hairy, maps by in situ hybridization to the chromosomal region 3q28-q29. We screened for mutations in HRY in 36 patients from 18 pedigrees with dominant optic atrophy and a group of normal control individuals. Heteroduplex mutation analysis and direct sequencing of all four coding exons and one upstream putative untranslated exon were performed. No disease-associated sequence alterations were identified. A polymorphism in the untranslated region of exon 2 was found, with four alleles. PCR amplification of this part of exon 2 in four of the pedigrees affected by autosomal dominant optic atrophy mapping to chromosome 3q, followed by haplotype analysis, showed recombination between HRY and OPA1 in one pedigree. This allows us to genetically position HRY in relation to known microsatellite markers in the region, placing HRY telomeric to marker D3S3562 and centromeric to D3S1305. This is outside the published critical disease interval for dominant optic atrophy. We have, therefore, excluded HRY as the gene for dominant optic atrophy by sequence analysis, mapped it genetically, and identified a polymorphism in our population.


Archive | 2016

Modeling AIPL1-defect using iPS-derived retinal progenitors from a patient Leber Congenital Amaurosis

Berta De la Cerda; Andrea Diez-Lloret; Francisco J. Diaz-Corrales; María Lourdes Valdés-Sánchez; Ana B. García-Delgado; Eduardo Rodriguez-Bocanegra; Vaibhav Bhatia; Carmen Ayuso; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

Resumen del poster presentado al 50th Inner Ear Biology Workshop, celebrado en Alcala de Henares-Madrid (Espana) del 10 al 13 de septiembre de 2013.Resumen del trabajo presentado al 15o Congreso Nacional de la Sociedad Espanola de Neurociencia (SENC) celebrado en Oviedo del 25 al 27 de septiembre de 2013.Resumen del poster presentado al CIBERDEM Annual Meeting, celebrado en Cerdanyola del Valles, Barcelona (Espana) del 11 al 13 de mayo de 2016.-- et al.Resumen del trabajo presentado al XXXVIII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Ciencias Fisiologicas (SECF), celebrado en Zaragoza del 13 al 16 de septiembre de 2016.Poster presentado en el XI European Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease, celebrado los dias 3 al 6 de julio de 2013 en Berlin (Alemania)Memoria presentada para optar al grado de Doctor por la Licenciada en Biologia Angela Prieto Folgado y realizada en el Instituto de Investigaciones Biomedicas Alberto Sols.La realizacion de este trabajo ha sido posible gracias a la financiacion otorgada por el FIS al proyecto de investigacion 96/1803.Grant Funding Source: Supported by the Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (PI0011406) to MF.The chemotherapeutic study of a limited series of steroidal sapogenins from several endemic species of the flora of the Canary Islands is presented here. On the whole, they possess a very weak antibacterial activity, a slight antifungal effect and one of them, vespertilin, displays interesting cytostatic activity (ID50 = 5 micrograms/ml). A pharmacodynamic screening carried out on this product mainly revealed very slight toxicity, antihistaminic activity and a light tranquilizing effect. The data obtained justify further research.The purpose of this study was to characterize the role of ions other than Ca2+ in hepatic responses to alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation. We report that the alpha 1-adrenoreceptor activation of hepatic functions is accompanied by extracellular acidification and an increase in intracellular pH. These effects are dependent on extracellular Na+ concentration and are inhibited by the Na+/H+ antiporter blocker 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl) amiloride under conditions that preclude antagonistic effects on agonist binding. Thus, the activation of plasma membrane Na+/H+ exchange is an essential feature of the hepatic alpha-adrenoreceptor-coupled signaling pathway. The following observations indicate that the sustained hepatic alpha 1-adrenergic actions rely on a functional coupling between the plasma membrane Na+/H+ and Na+/Ca2+ exchangers, resulting in the stimulation of Ca2+ influx. 1) Inhibition of the Na+/K(+)-ATPase does not prevent the alpha 1-adrenergic effects. However, alpha 1-adrenoreceptor stimulation fails to induce intracellular alkalinization and to acidify the extracellular medium in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. 2) A non-receptor-induced increase in intracellular Na+ concentration, caused by the ionophore monensin, stimulates Ca2+ influx and increases vascular resistance. 3) Inhibition of Na+/Ca2+ exchange prevents, in a concentration-dependent manner, most of the alpha 1-agonist-induced responses. 4) The actions of Ca(2+)-mobilizing vasoactive peptide receptors or alpha 2-adrenoreceptors, which produce neither sustained extracellular acidification nor release of Ca2+, are insensitive to Na+/H+ exchange blockers.Poster presentado en la VII Reunion Anual de la Red Tematica de Investigacion Cooperativa en Cancer (RTICC), celebrada en Salamanca el 24 de septiembre de 2014Resumen del trabajo presentado al VI Meeting de la Red Espanola de Canales Ioniocs (RECI), celebrado en Santiago de Compostela del 6 al 8 de septiembre de 2017.Tesis Doctoral presentada por Laura Jimenez Perez para optar al grado de doctor por la Universidad de Valladolid, Departamento de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular y FisiologiaPoster presentado en la VII Reunion Anual de la Red Tematica de Investigacion Cooperativa en Cancer (RTICC), celebrada en Salamanca el 24 de septiembre de 2014Resumen del trabajo presentado al XXXXVIII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular (SEBBM), celebrado en Valencia del 7 al 10 de septiembre de 2015.Esta Tesis Doctoral fue realizada en el Centro Andaluz de Biologia del Desarrollo por la licenciada Briseida Beli Cacho Valadez para optar al grado de Doctor por la Universidad Pablo de Olavide.Rat liver S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) synthetase appears as high-M(r) (tetramer) and low-M(r) (dimer) forms. Both are inhibited in the presence of GSSG at pH 8. The calculated Ki values are 2.14 and 4.03 mM for the high- and low-M(r) forms, respectively. No effect on enzyme activity was observed in the presence of GSH, but modulation of inhibition by GSSG can be obtained by addition of GSH. At a total glutathione concentration (GSH + GSSG) of 10 mM, a KOX of 1.74 was calculated for the high-M(r) form, whereas this constant was 2.85 for the low-M(r) AdoMet synthetase. No incorporation of [35S]GSSG was observed in either of the enzyme forms, and inhibition of enzyme activity was correlated with dissociation of both AdoMet synthetases to a monomer. The data obtained in the presence of GSSG seem to suggest that oxidation leads to the formation of an intrasubunit disulfide. The possible regulation of AdoMet synthetase activity by the GSH/GSSG ratio is discussed, as well as its in vivo significance.Trabajo presentado en el XI Simposi de Neurobiologia: Future technical advances, organizado por la Socitat Catalana de Biologia, en Barcelona, los dias 12 y 13 de noviembre de 2018El estudio de la relacion entre componentes de la dieta y la salud/enfermedad utiliza metodos de valoracion de la ingesta dietetica, del estatus nutricional y de marcadores de funcion o de efecto. En concreto, en el estudio de los carotenoides y la salud ocular, interesa el estudio de dos carotenoides sin actividad provitamina A, la luteina y la zeaxantina, por su posible papel en la optimizacion de la funcion visual y en la prevencion de enfermedades cronicas asociadas a la edad, y de tres carotenoides con actividad provitamina A: -caroteno, -caroteno y -criptoxantina, por ser precursores de retinol, nutriente del que depende el ciclo visual para una vision normal. En el presente trabajo se ha llevado a cabo el estudio de los carotenoides de la dieta mas relevantes para la salud ocular humana considerando de forma simultanea parametros relacionados con la ingesta, el estatus y la funcion visual, asi como diversas variables que pueden modificar el estatus nutricional, como son la concentracion de lipidos en sangre, y la bioaccesibilidad de los carotenoides a partir de alimentos de amplio consumo...Fetal rat hepatocytes treated with transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) die by apoptosis. However, a subpopulation of them survives and undergoes an epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT). This transition also occurs upon incubation with fetal bovine serum. We have isolated the subpopulations that undergo EMT (TGF-beta-treated-fetal hepatocytes: TbetaT-FH; serum-treated-fetal hepatocytes: ST-FH) and show that they present high levels of vimentin and Snail expression and lack cytokeratin 18 and E-cadherin. Both TbetaT-FH and ST-FH cells require mitogens to grow and maintain the response to TGF-beta in terms of growth inhibition. However, they lack differentiation markers such as the liver-enriched transcription factors hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF-4) or HNF-1alpha and express the progenitor marker OV-6. Interestingly, the EMT process confers them resistance to the apoptotic effect of TGF-beta, with cells showing higher levels of active AKT and Bcl-x(L) than fetal hepatocytes. In summary, these cells are refractory to the apoptotic effects of TGF-beta, showing characteristics of liver progenitors and of some hepatocellular carcinoma cells.Memoria de tesis presentada por Luis Vazquez Fonseca, Licenciado en Bioquimica para optar al grado de Doctor. Esta Tesis Doctoral ha sido realizada bajo el programa de doctorado de Biotecnologia y Tecnologia Quimica en el grupo de investigacion del CIBERER U729 en el Centro Andaluz de Biologia del Desarrollo, Area de Biologia Celular del Departamento de Fisiologia, Anatomia y Biologia Celular de la Universidad Pablo de Olavide y bajo la direccion del Dr. Carlos Santos Ocana y el Dr. Placido NavasResumen del poster presentado al Joint FEPS & XXXVI Spanish Physiological Society Congress (Sociedad Espanola de Ciencias Fisiologicas) celebrado en Santiago de Compostela (Espana) del 8 al 11 de septiembre de 2012.Poster presentado al 17o Congreso Nacional de la Sociedad Espanola de Neurociencia, celebrado en Alicante del 27 al 30 de septiembre de 2017.The mutations at the bithorax locus produce a transformation of anterior haltere into anterior wing. The bx1 allele presents unusual features when compared with other bx alleles. The phenotype of bx1 homozygotes is temperature sensitive but only with regard to the distal and not to the proximal transformation, thus suggesting two different components in the bithorax transformation. The phenotype of bx1 homozygotes is stronger than that of bx1 over the deletion of the gene, suggesting a trans interaction of the bx1 chromosomes which results in mutual partial inactivation. We show by temperature shift and clonal analysis experiments that the decision on whether to differentiate haltere or wing structures is taken at the end of the proliferation period of the mutant disc.Poster presentado al XXXVII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular, celebrado en Granada del 9 al 12 de septiembre de 2014.Poster presentado al XXVII Congreso Nacional de la Asociacion Espanola de Genetica Humana celebrado en Madrid del 10 al 12 de abril de 2013.Poster presentado al XXXVII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular, celebrado en Granada del 9 al 12 de septiembre de 2014.Poster presentado en el XI European Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease, celebrado los dias 3 al 6 de julio de 2013 en Berlin (Alemania)Resumen del poster presentado al 6th Symposium on Biomedical Research: Advances and Perspectives in Molecular Endocrinology In Homage to Gabriella Morreale, celebrado en el Instituto de Investigaciones Biomedicas Alberto Sols (IIBM-CSIC) el 31 de mayo de 2019.Resumen del trabajo presentado al Spanish Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (SEBBM), celebrado en Madrid del 16 al 19 de julio de 2019.Poster presentado en el XII European Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease, celebrado los dias 15 a 18 de julio de 2015 en Bilbao (Espana)Trabajo presentado en el XL Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular. FEBS3+1st Joint Meeting of the French-Portuguese-Spanish Biochemical and Molecular, celebrado en Barcelona (Espana), del 23 al 26 de octubre de 2017Resumen del poster presentado al Joint FEPS & XXXVI Spanish Physiological Society Congress (Sociedad Espanola de Ciencias Fisiologicas) celebrado en Santiago de Compostela (Espana) del 8 al 11 de septiembre de 2012.Trabajo presentado en el XII GEIRLI Meeting: New trends in redox biology: a multidisciplinary approach, celebrado en Barcelona (Espana), los dias 4 y 5 de julio de 2019Treatment of nucleosomal particles with dimethylmaleic anhydride, a reagent for protein amino groups, is accompanied by a biphasic release of histones H2A plus H2B; one H2A.H2B dimer is more easily released than the other. This behavior allows the preparation of nucleosomal particles containing only one H2A.H2B dimer, which were complemented with 125I-labeled H2A.H2B. These reconstituted particles, which contain one labeled and one unlabeled H2A.H2B dimer, were treated with the amount of reagent needed to release one of the two H2A.H2B dimers. Radioactivity was equally distributed between residual particles and released proteins, which is consistent with equivalent binding sites in the nucleosomal particle for H2A.H2B dimers, rather than with intrinsically different sites. The asymmetric release of H2A.H2B dimers would be caused by a change in the binding site of one dimer following the release of the other. This behavior might be related to the structural dynamics of nucleosomes.Resumen del trabajo presentado al European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Congress, celebrado en Barcelona (Espana) del 26 al 30 de agosto de 2017.Resumen del poster presentado al 49th European Association for the Study of Diabetes Annual Meeting, celebrado en Barcelona (Espana) del 23 al 27 de septiembre de 2013.-- et al.Trabajo doctoral realizado por Da Rebeca Lapresa Ruiz de Gauna, para optar al grado de doctor por la Universidad de Salamanca.Rationale: Several animal models have been developed to study acute lung injury (ALI); however the majority of these studies are focused on different mechanisms within the acute phase. These models do not allow studying the mechanisms in the later phases or testing any possible long-term treatment. The aim of this study was to develop an experimental ALI model simulating bronchial aspiration of gastric contents with bacterial superinfection with alveolar epithelial damage persisting over time. Methods: Sprague-Dawley rats (200-250g) were anesthetized with isofluorane. ALI was induced by intratracheal instillation of HCl (1 µl/g, 0.1 mol/L pH=1.4) followed by instillation of LPS from Escherichia coli O55:B5 (0, 10, 20, 30 or 40µg/g b.w.) two hours later. Control rats were treated with intratracheal instillations of saline. After 72h, the animals were sacrificed and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was sampled for further analysis of total protein concentration by bicinchoninic acid method. Results: At 72 h, rats suffered a significant loss of weight proportional to the administered dose of LPS (5.6% with 10µg/g b.w, 12.6% with 20µg/g b.w, 14.2% with 30µg/g b.w and 17.7% with 40µg/g b.w). Control rats gained in weight at 72h. LPS at 10, 20, 30 and 40µg/g b.w induced a 1.7, 2.5, 2.9 and 3.4 fold increase in total protein concentration in BAL fluid, respectively, reflecting a substantial increase proportional to the LPS dose. Conclusion: The degree of weight loss and the increase of total protein concentration in BAL fluid in the current model may reflect disease severity and progression. This model would be useful in future for new therapeutical options. Grant acknowledgements: FIS-PI12/02548 and Fundacio Parc Tauli.Resumen del trabajo presentado al European Respiratory Society (ERS) International Congress, celebrado en Paris (Francia) del 15 al 19 de septiembre de 2018.Resumen del trabajo presentado a las 5as Jornadas de Formacion del CIBERES celebradas en Bunyola (Mallorca) del 18 al 19 de octubre de 2012.Resumen del poster presentado al Joint FEPS & XXXVI Spanish Physiological Society Congress (Sociedad Espanola de Ciencias Fisiologicas) celebrado en Santiago de Compostela (Espana) del 8 al 11 de septiembre de 2012.Resumen del trabajo presentado al XIII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola del Dolor, celebrado en Pamplona del 2 al 4 de junio de 2016.This work was supported by grants FIS-01/1048 and nFIS-02/1199 from the Fondo de Investigacion Sanitaria and ngrant SA-087/01 from Junta de Castilla y Leon.Resumen del poster presentado al Joint Meeting of the American Physiological Society and the Physiological Society, celebrado en Dublin (Irlanda) del 29 al 31 de julio de 2016.Trabajo presentado al 5th International Conference on Phospholipase A2 Mediated Signaling in Translational Medicine celebrado en New Orleans (US) del 20 al 21 de mayo de 2013.Tesis Doctoral presentada por Rebeca Torres Merino para optar al grado de Doctora por la Universidad de Valladolid, Facultad de Medicina: Dpto. de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular y Fisiologia.Poster presentado al Annual Meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO), celebrado en Seattle, Washington (US) del 1 al 5 de mayo de 2016.Resumen del trabajo presentado al 63rd Annual Meeting Biophysical Society, celebrado en Baltimore, Maryland (USA) del 2 al 6 de marzo de 2019.Poster presentado al XXXVII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular, celebrado en Granada del 9 al 12 de septiembre de 2014.Resumen del poster presentado a la 5th Conference on Advances in Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Neurological Disorders (Joint conference of the European Society for Neurochemistry and the Biochemical Society) en la University of Bath (UK) del 23 al 26 de junio de 2013.-- Tambien presentado al 15o Congreso Nacional de la Sociedad Espanola de Neurociencia (SENC) celebrado en Oviedo del 25 al 27 de septiembre de 2013.Resumen del trabajo presentado al XXXVI Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular celebrado en Madrid del 4 al 6 de septiembre de 2013.Resumen del trabajo presentado a la 5th Conference on Advances in Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Neurological Disorders (Joint conference of the European Society for Neurochemistry and the Biochemical Society) en la University of Bath (UK) del 23 al 26 de junio de 2013.Resumen del poster presentado al XXVIII Congreso Nacional de la Sociedad Espanola de diabetes, celebrado en Bilbao del 20 al 22 de abril de 2016.SAF2016-77703-C2-2-R of the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Spain nand the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF); AGAUR 2017-SGR106 and the CERCA Programme of the Generalitat de Catalunya; C. Sanfeliu nbelong to Group 05 of CIBER Epidemiologia y Salud Publica (CIBERESP) of nthe Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo, Spain


Archives of Ophthalmology | 1998

Clinical Features in Affected Individuals From 21 Pedigrees With Dominant Optic Atrophy

Marcela Votruba; F. W. Fitzke; Graham E. Holder; A. Carter; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya; Anthony T. Moore


Archive | 2011

A novel locus for autosomal dominant cone-rod dystrophy in a family of gypsy origin

Margarita Romero-Durán; Kunka Kamenarova; Sylvia Cherninkova; Abhay Krishna; Quincy Prescott; María Lourdes Valdés-Sánchez; Radka Kaneva; Ivo Kremensky; Christina Chakarova; Ivailo Tournev; Shom Shanker Bhattacharya

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At Moore

Moorfields Eye Hospital

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Christina Chakarova

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Annette Payne

Brunel University London

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Quincy Prescott

University College London

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Abhay Krishna

Spanish National Research Council

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Ivailo Tournev

New Bulgarian University

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I. Moseley

Moorfields Eye Hospital

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